Delegates from 67 towns arrivedย in Ipswich on Tuesday, Sept. 6, 1774 "to consider and determine on such measures as the late acts of Parliament" and declaring support for a Provincial Congress. They reconvened four years later to debate a draft constitution for Massachusetts.
The Tithingman at the Ipswich Meeting House
Ipswich Mob Attacks Loyalist Representative Dr. John Calef
Rachel Haffield Clinton Arrested for Witchcraft, May 28, 1692
The Women of Chebacco Build a Meeting House
The “Birthplace of American Independence”
Destination Topsfield: Mass Audubon’s Ipswich River Wildlife Sanctuary
How Christmas Came to Ipswich
Recollections of a Boy’s Life In the Village
Adrift on a Haystack, December 1786
The Newburyport Tea Party
Madame Shatswell’s Cup of Tea
The “Detested Tea” and the Ipswich Resolves
The British Attack on Sandy Bay, Sept. 8, 1814
Rowdy Nights at Quartermaster Perkins’ Tavern
Reply by the Town of Ipswich to the Boston Pamphlet, December 28, 1772
A document known as the โBostonย Pamphletโ was distributed throughout the colony, asserting the colonistsโ rights. Ipswich held a Town Meeting, established its own โCommittee of Correspondence," passed a series of resolves, and gave instructions to their reresentative in the General Court, Michael Farley.















