Dudley served as governor until 1715, and his administration was marked by regular conflict with the general court, particularly in the early years. His instruction from the English colonial office was to gain a regular salary for the governor. He and all of the succeeding royal governors, however, were unsuccessful in extracting this concession from the Colonial legislature, and it became a regular source of friction between representatives of crown and colony. Dudley pressed his complaint in letters to London, in which he complained of men "who love not the Crown and Government of England to any manner of obedience". He wrote in one letter to his son
Paul, then the provincial attorney general, "this country will never be worth living in for lawyers and gentlemen, till the charter is taken away." He consistently vetoed the election of councilors and speakers of the general court who had acted against him in 1689, further increasing his unpopularity in Massachusetts. In contrast, his tenure as Governor of New Hampshire was popular; its legislature specifically praised him to the Queen after learning of complaints levelled against him by his Massachusetts opponents.
Queen Anne's War Dudley was active in managing colonial defenses during
Queen Anne's War. He attempted to forestall French-orchestrated Indian hostilities by meeting with Indians at
Casco Bay in June 1703, but the French had already begun rallying them to their cause and the war began with raids on the settlements of southern Maine in August 1703. Dudley called out the militia and licensed privateers to raid French shipping, such as
Thomas Larimore; he also fortified the Massachusetts and New Hampshire frontiers from the Connecticut River to southern Maine. The French and Indians
raided Deerfield in February 1704, prompting calls for retaliation, and Dudley authorized aging Indian fighter
Benjamin Church to lead an expedition against settlements in
Acadia. He also engaged in protracted negotiations for the return of captives taken at Deerfield. Boston merchants and the Mathers accused Dudley of being in league with smugglers and others who were illegally trading with the French, in part because he specifically refused permission for Church to attack the Acadian capital and commercial center of
Port Royal. He sought to forestall these criticisms in 1707 when he sent the colonial militia on
a fruitless expedition against Port Royal. In 1708, a bitter attack on his administration was published in London entitled
The Deplorable State of New England by reason of a Covetous and Treacherous Governor and Pusillanimous Counsellors, as part of a campaign to have him recalled. Dudley again rallied the provincial militias for a planned expedition against Quebec in 1709, but the supporting expedition from England was called off. Support arrived from England in 1710, and a
successful siege led to the fall of Port Royal and the beginning of the
Province of Nova Scotia. Boston was again the organizing point for the 1711
Quebec Expedition combining British and provincial forces. The expedition failed disastrously, however, when some of its transports foundered on the shores of the
Saint Lawrence River. During the war, Dudley also authorized expeditions against the
Abenakis of northern New England, but these were largely ineffective. The war quieted to some extent after the fall of Port Royal, with only small raiding parties hitting frontier communities, and peace came in 1713 with the
Treaty of Utrecht. Dudley negotiated a separate peace with the Abenakis at
Portsmouth, New Hampshire in 1713. He hoped to separate the western Kennebec tribe from French influence and consequently adopted a fairly hard line, threatening to withhold trade that was vital to their survival and reiterating claims of British sovereignty over them. The
Treaty of Portsmouth (1713) resulted from those negotiations and repeated the claims of sovereignty. Dudley claimed that the French had ceded Abenaki lands as part of Acadia, and one sachem responded: "The French never said anything to us about it, and we wonder how they would give it away without asking us". Nevertheless, Dudley and succeeding governors treated the Abenaki as British subjects, and friction persisted over British colonial expansion into Maine which flared into
Dummer's War in the 1720s.
Other issues The war worsened currency and finance problems in Massachusetts. The province had been issuing
paper currency since the 1690s, and the issue of large amounts of this currency was causing it to depreciate compared to precious metals used in other currencies. The situation caused a division between the colonists and the governor which was not repaired until the 1760s. Business leaders who borrowed money were happy to pay it back later with depreciated currency, while lenders sought reforms to stabilize the currency. In 1714, Dudley's opponents proposed that a bank should issue as much as £50,000 in currency, secured by the shareholder's real estate properties. Dudley was opposed to this scheme, and instead convinced the provincial legislature to issue £50,000 in
bills of credit. The financially powerful interests whom he upset with this move proved to be his downfall. In 1713, surveys determined that the border between Massachusetts and the
Connecticut Colony had been incorrectly sited in the 17th century, and that Massachusetts had consequently distributed lands that actually belonged to Connecticut. Dudley and Connecticut Governor
Gurdon Saltonstall negotiated an agreement in which Massachusetts would retain those lands but would grant to Connecticut an equivalent amount of land. The
Equivalent Lands amounted to over on either side of the Connecticut River in northern Massachusetts, southeastern Vermont, and southwestern New Hampshire. These lands were auctioned off in April 1716, and Connecticut used the proceeds to fund
Yale College. Dudley's commission expired in 1714, six months after the death of Queen Anne, as did that of Lieutenant Governor
William Tailer. The governor's council was dominated by his political opponents, and they asserted its authority at that point. They assumed control of the government on February 14, 1715, under the provisions of the provincial charter concerning governance in the absence of the governor and his lieutenant. Just six weeks later, news arrived from England that Dudley's commission had been temporarily confirmed by
King George I, and he was reinstated on March 21. However, Dudley's political opponents were active in London, especially those involved in the land bank proposal, and they convinced the king to appoint Colonel
Elizeus Burges as governor later in the year. Burges was not in the colony, so governance fell to Lieutenant Governor Tailer whose commission had been renewed.
Jonathan Belcher and
Jeremiah Dummer, the brother of Dudley's son-in-law
William Dummer, bribed Burges to resign his commission without leaving England in April 1716, and a new commission was issued to
Samuel Shute, who promised to oppose attempts to introduce the land bank. Dudley retired to the family home in Roxbury. He acted as an informal advisor to Governor Shute upon his arrival, and made appearances at public and private functions. He died in Roxbury on April 2, 1720, and was buried next to his father in Roxbury's
Eliot Burying Ground, accompanied with the pomp and ceremony appropriate to his position. ==Family and legacy==