Early Years
Printer and Postmaster
In July 1754, Hunter came down with a fever while waiting in New York to meet up with Franklin, who was then attending the Albany Congress; his illness postponed their New England leg for a few weeks. But in Boston, Massachusetts, that October, he suffered a recurrence of his "summer fever," which resulted in his spending that winter in Boston recuperating. When he finally returned to Virginia in the spring of 1755, his condition worsened. By September Hunter had announced his intention to seek treatment in England, departing in the fall; but a relapse detained him again. When Franklin visited in March 1756, he found his partner weak and thin, though improving. Hunter finally embarked for England that June, where he would reside for the next three years.
This three-year period coincided with peak of the French and Indian War, during which time his office was inundated with the printing needed to direct a colony at war. During his absence, Hunter's office was run by his bookbinder, John Stretch. However, wartime conditions meant supply shortages and increasing demands that Stretch had difficulty meeting. Producing the treasury notes needed to pay for men and provisions became a problem. Between May 1755 and October 1760, Virginia's treasury issued nearly £540,000 in currency, all of it printed in Williamsburg, most of it by Stretch. By mid-1757, demand for new notes dominated the office's output, to the exclusion of other work. Most telling were delays in printing the "session laws" recording legislation deemed necessary to the conduct of the war. Gradually, tensions rose between Stretch, Dinwiddie, and the General Assembly over the conflicting priorities, all while Hunter was absent from his obligations.
Hunter finally returned to Virginia in July 1759. Evidence suggests that two journeyman printers came with him: Joseph Royle and Alexander Purdie. Shortly thereafter, Stretch left for Maryland, indicating that Hunter had promptly purged his office of objectionable personnel and attitudes. Such a view is buttressed by the fact that Hunter was appointed as a justice to the York County Court within days of his return, and that his salary as public printer was raised from £300 to £350 when the General Assembly next met in November, both of which required gubernatorial consent. Evidently, he satisfied the needs of the government and so was rewarded for that service.
Later Years
In light of this renewed vitality, Hunter's sudden death on August 14, 1761 (as reported by a Maryland death notice), was a surprise to many. Death, however, did not end his influence. In his will, he recognized his "natural son"—William Jr.—born to Elizabeth Reynolds (whom Hunter had never married) before his English journey; hence he left a half interest in his office to his foreman, Joseph Royle, if Royle operated the office for the equal benefit of himself and young Billy Hunter until the son reached adulthood. He also directed that his son should be sent to Philadelphia for a formal education supervised by his friend Franklin; as result, Billy Hunter and Franklin's son William became lifelong friends, with both men evincing Loyalist sympathies during the Revolutionary War (1775–1783). Moreover, Hunter's estate was sufficient to cover his outstanding debt while leaving enough to fulfill his bequests. He made substantial monetary gifts to his sisters. With a sizable dowry, Roseanna Hunter would marry two printers: first Joseph Royle, and then John Dixon. The bequest that Elizabeth Hunter Holt received in New York allowed John Holt, her husband, to establish an independent press later favored by the political group the Sons of Liberty; the couple also raised a son, John Hunter Holt, who returned to Virginia as Norfolk's patriot printer. Sister Polly Hunter had married into Williamsburg's Davenport family, becoming wife to Reverend Joseph Davenport, and bearing sons who worked in Williamsburg's printing offices as well. And from the proceeds that he received in the dissolution of their brief partnership, James Tarpley bought the bell that hangs in Bruton Parish Church's steeple in Williamsburg—as tribute to an Anglican patron.
Time Line
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April 1, 1750 - William Parks dies of pleurisy onboard the Nelson, en route to England; William Hunter succeeds him as Virginia's public printer.
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July 1750 - William Hunter suspends publication of the Virginia Gazette until the estate of William Parks is probated.
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January 3, 1751 - William Hunter issues the first number of his Virginia Gazette.
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July 15, 1751 - William Hunter acquires the entire Williamsburg printing office from the estate of William Parks.
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October 11, 1751 - William Hunter, Virginia's as yet unofficial public printer, advertises his first Virginia Almanack, to appear in 1752.
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March 12, 1752 - William Hunter is formally appointed as public printer of Virginia at £300 per year.
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August 10, 1753 - William Hunter is appointed with Benjamin Franklin as "His Majesty's Deputy Postmasters General for all His Dominions in North America." Hunter directly oversees all of the postal routes south of Annapolis.
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July 1754 - William Hunter falls ill in New York, awaiting Benjamin Franklin's return from the Albany Congress.
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October 14, 1754 - Benjamin Franklin reports William Hunter ill in Boston, Massachusetts, while touring northern postal routes.
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Spring 1755 - William Hunter returns to Virginia after spending the winter in Boston, Massachusetts, recuperating after a bout of ill health.
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September 26, 1755 - William Hunter announces his departure for England "this Fall," though he actually remains in Virginia until spring.
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April 12, 1756 - The General Assembly continues William Hunter's appointment as public printer of Virginia at the same salary but with expanded duties and regulation.
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June 20, 1756 - William Hunter leaves for England; during his absence, his printing office is run by John Stretch until July 1759.
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June 28, 1757 - Virginia lieutenant governor Robert Dinwiddie reports that the printing office is "entirely employ'd in printing our new Paper [Currency]."
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January 1758 - Benjamin Franklin, referring to his fellow postmaster general William Hunter of Virginia, who is in England recovering his health, reports that "Mr Hunter will be returning in April," but a relapse keeps him abroad another year.
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September 1758 - In William Hunter's name, John Stretch bills the General Assembly for the printing of treasury notes. The assembly deems his claim "extravagant" and pays one-third as "sufficient Satisfaction."
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October 1758 - The General Assembly negotiates with "the printer"—likely acting public printer John Stretch—for the printing of more treasury notes.
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April 12, 1759 - Benjamin Franklin reports that William Hunter has "gone home to Virginia perfectly well" after a long recuperation in England.
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July 5, 1759 - William Hunter returns to Virginia after a 37-month absence in England, where he recuperated after a period of ill health. This is also probably the date Alexander Purdie and Joseph Royle, Hunter's new office staff, arrive in Virginia.
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July 16, 1759 - The York County Court recommends William Hunter as one of its six new magistrates.
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November 1759 - William Hunter's mercantile partnership with James Tarpley commences.
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November 12, 1759 - The General Assembly reappoints William Hunter as the public printer of Virginia at an increased salary of £350 per year.
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June 1760 - William Hunter accepts a commission from the group the Associates of Thomas Bray "to open a Negroe School" in Williamsburg.
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August 14, 1761 - William Hunter dies in Williamsburg. Joseph Royle succeeds him as the colony's public printer.
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August 17, 1761 - William Hunter's will is proved at Yorktown. It directs Joseph Royle to continue his printing business using money from Hunter's estate, with proceeds to be split equally between Royle and Hunter's minor son, William Jr.
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November 5, 1761 - Joseph Royle reports William Hunter's death to the General Assembly; the body formally confirms him as the colony's public printer.
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October 15, 1764 - The settlement of William Hunter's estate is recorded, with assets listed as £8614.8.1 and debts as £8554.16.5, including cash legacies in Hunter's will.
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January 26, 1766 - Joseph Royle dies in Williamsburg. Alexander Purdie temporarily succeeds him as colony's public printer.
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Categories
- Journalism
- Colonial History (ca. 1560–1763)
Further Reading
Cite This Entry
- APA Citation:
Rawson, D. William Hunter (d. 1761). (2011, July 19). In Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved from http://www.EncyclopediaVirginia.org/Hunter_William_d_1761.
- MLA Citation:
Rawson, David. "William Hunter (d. 1761)." Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Foundation for the Humanities, 19 Jul. 2011. Web. READ_DATE.
First published: May 27, 2011 | Last modified: July 19, 2011
Contributed by David Rawson, an adjunct professor of history at Worcester Polytechnic Institute.
