

Robert Love's Warnings animates this nearly forgotten aspect of colonial life, richly detailing the moral and legal basis of the practice and the religious and humanistic vision of those who enforced it.

With a fresh interpretation of the role that warning played in Boston's civic structure and street life, Robert Love's Warnings reveals the complex legal, social, and political landscape of New England in the decade before the Revolution.Among all the colonial communities in the Americas, New England polities were distinctive using a warning system to identify and inform newcomers that if they stayed, the town would not be responsible for extending them welfare if they needed it. Through these documents, Dayton and Salinger reconstruct the biographies of travelers, exploring why so many people were on the move throughout the British Atlantic and why they came to Boston. Appointed warner at age sixty-eight owing to his unusual capacity for remembering faces, Love kept meticulous records of the sojourners he spoke to, including where they lodged and whether they were lame, ragged, drunk, impudent, homeless, or begging. Warning thus functioned as a registration system, encouraging the flow of labor and protecting town coffers.Between 17, Robert Love warned four thousand itinerants, including youthful migrant workers, demobilized British soldiers, recently exiled Acadians, and women following the redcoats who occupied Boston in 1768.

If they became needy, their relief was paid for by the province treasurer. Warned youths and adults could reside, work, marry, or buy a house in the city. This declaration meant not that newcomers literally had to leave, but that they could not claim legal settlement or rely on town poor relief. Salinger follow one otherwise obscure town clerk, Robert Love, as he walked through Boston's streets to tell sojourners, "in His Majesty's Name, " that they were warned to depart the town in fourteen days. Robert Love's Warnings animates this nearly forgotten aspect of colonial life, richly detailing the moral and legal basis of the practice and the religious and humanistic vision of those who enforced it.Historians Cornelia H. In colonial America, the system of "warning out" was distinctive to New England, a way for a community to regulate those to whom it would extend welfare.
