The
resolution
applied to the rest of
Georgia, to Quebec, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, St.
Georgia, to Quebec, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, St.
Arthur Schlesinger - Colonial Merchants and the American Revolution
C.
Gas.
, Mch.
27, 1775.
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? 528
THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1776
mous resolution vesting the local committees of observation
with complete control over prosecutions for debt. No
action for debt should be commenced in the court of com-
mon pleas, nor any such action begun there since the Sep-
tember return should be proceeded in, without the consent
of the parish or district committee. In certain cases the
committees were instructed to permit prosecution: when-
ever debtors refused to renew their obligations or to give
reasonable security; when they were justly suspected of an
intention to depart the province or defraud their creditors;
or whenever there should appear any other reasonable cause
for granting permission. 1
The only action in behalf of domestic production ema-
nated from the provincial congress in January. The in-
habitants were asked to give a preference to their own
manufactures, to cultivate cotton, hemp, wheat, barley and
hops, and to kill no sheep for sale after March I following.
A resolution was passed to employ storekeepers at Charles-
ton, Georgetown and Beaufort to buy all the wool that
might be brought to them, at stated rates, and to sell the
wool to weavers at cost price; and also to market domestic
linens, woolens and cottons without charge to the manu-
facturers. 8 Apparently not so much attention was paid to
the sumptuary regulations as in Virginia and Maryland.
However, the mourning regulations were widely observed.
Also, at Charleston the concerts of the St. Coecilia Society
were suspended; and the races at Georgetown were called
off. 1
All things considered, the statement of the General Com-
mittee in a letter to the Committee of Sixty at New York
1 4 Am. Arch. , vol. i, p. 1113.
1Ibid. , vol. i, pp. 1112-1113, 1116.
8 5. C. Co*. , Nov. 21, Dec. 19, 1774.
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? IN THE PLANTATION PROVINCES
529
on March 1, 1775, seems well substantiated so far as the
essential features of the Association were concerned. "We
have the pleasure to inform you," the letter said, "that in
this colony the Association takes place as effectually as law
itself. . . . We may assure you of our fixed determination
to adhere to the resolutions at all hazards; and that minis-
terial opposition is here obliged to be silent. " 1
While the Continental Association was being put into
operation in the twelve Associated Provinces, certain
other parts of continental British America, of lesser im-
portance, held sternly aloof from the movement. This
brought into operation the comprehensive boycott recom-
mended by Article xiv against dissentient provinces. South
Carolina was most intimately concerned in the failure of
Georgia to join the league of provinces, as the staples of
the two provinces were the same. Therefore, on February
8, 1775, the General Committee at Charleston decreed that
thereafter all "Trade, Commerce, Dealings or Intercourse"
should cease with the inhabitants of that province. 2
A few weeks later delegates from St. John's Parish in
Georgia arrived in Charleston and sought to show reason
to the General Committee why St. John's Parish should be
exempted from the boycott. They contended that Article
xiv should "be considered as a general rule only, and as
respects this Province [Georgia] considered in a mixed or
promiscuous sense; but, as we of this Parish are a body
detached from the rest by our Resolutions and Association,
and sufficiently distinct by local situation, large enough for
particular notice . . . , adjoining a sea-port . . . , there-
1 N. Y. Journ. , Apr. 6, 1775; also 4 Am. Arch. , vol. ii, p. 2.
1Ibid. , vol. i, p. 1163; also S. C. Gas. , Mch. 6, 1775. South Caro-
linians, owning plantations in Georgia or having debts due from there,
? were specifically exempted from the terms of the resolution.
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? 530 THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1776
fore we must be considered as comprehended within the
spirit and equitable meaning of the Continental Associa-
tion. " But the General Committee felt constrained to ad-
here to a literal interpretation of the Association, and ad-
vised the people of St. John's to present their case before
the ensuing Continental Congress. 1 This course the St.
John's committee perforce determined to adopt. Meantime,
being denied trade with South Carolina, the parish found it
impossible to subsist without some limited trading connec-
tions with the merchants at Savannah; and so they were
forced to forego an absolute boycott for a carefully regu-
lated trade under the supervision of a committee especially
appointed for the purpose. 2
Georgia was not the only British province on the conti-
nent to be delinquent on this important occasion, although
it was the only one of the old thirteen in which the Conti-
nental Association was not being effectively executed. The
First Continental Congress had invited Quebec, St. John's
Isle,8 Nova Scotia, and East and West Florida to accede to
the Association; * and the threat of boycott in Article xiv
applied, by its terms, to " any colony or province in North-
America. " Not one of these places was of importance
commercially; but it was deemed desirable by the radical
party that British America should offer a united front to
the mother country. Early in February, 1775, it developed
that there was an inclination among the British merchants
in the city of Quebec to adopt the Association; but no.
1 S. C. Gas. , Mch. 6, 1775; also 4 Am. Arch. , vol. i, pp. 1161-1163.
1 Journals Cont. Cong. (L. C. Edn. ), vol. ii, pp. 45-48. For Gov-
ernor Wright's view of this arrangement, vide White, Ga. Hist. Colls,
p. 523.
1 The early name for Prince Edward Island.
* Journals Cont. Cong. , vol. i, pp. 101, 103, 105-113.
? ? Generated for (University of Chicago) on 2014-08-19 01:37 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/mdp. 39015011480665 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? IN THE PLANTATION PROVINCES
531
action was taken because, 'according to one merchant there,
"it would only serve to throw the trade out of our own
hands into those of the French, who would never listen to
any proposals of that kind but rejoice in such an opportun-
ity to wrest the trade from us. " 1 It was true of all these
regions that, due to a preponderance of aliens in the popu-
lation, a sympathetic understanding of the constitutional
and governmental principles at stake was lacking. Further-
more, the inhabitants relished the prospect of diverting to
themselves the rich trade which had been monopolized by
the older and more populous communities. 2
After a lull of several weeks following the action of
South Carolina with reference to Georgia, the northern
provinces began to pass resolutions of boycott which
affected all the dissentient provinces. On April 17, the
Philadelphia committee served warning on the local mer-
chants that such a measure impended; and ten days later
a resolution was adopted for suspending all exportation to
Georgia, Quebec, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and all parts
of the fishing coasts and fishing islands until the Continental
Congress should direct otherwise. 8 The fisheries were in-
cluded in the boycott because of the news, recently received,
of the act of Parliament restraining New England from
the fisheries. On May 1, the Maryland provincial conven-
tion passed a similar resolution, and in turn extended the
boycott to include the town of Boston, which was now
occupied by the British forces as an armed camp after the
fighting at Lexington and Concord. 4 On the same day the
1Letter of Dec. 24, 1774, Pa. Packet, Feb. 13, 1775; also Mass. Ga*.
& Post-Boy, Feb. 27.
1? . g. , vide Pub. Rec. Off. , C. O. 5, no. 138 (L. C. Transcripts),
p. 404; 4 Am. Arch. , vol. i, pp. 1164-1165.
3Ibid. , vol. ii, pp. 338, 421; also Pa. Eve. Post, Apr. 18, 29, 1775.
* Md. Gas. , May 4, 1775; also 4 Am. Arch. , vol. ii, p. 380.
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? 53-5
THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1776
New York committee took like action;l and the committees
of Cumberland County, Va. , and Newark, N. J. , followed
later in the month. 2
When the Second Continental Congress assembled on the
tenth of May, one of the first questions that had to be
settled concerned the status of St. John's Parish under the
Association. Dr. Lyman Hall presented himself as the
delegate of the parish, and his admission to the membership
was voted unanimously. 8 On the seventeenth when a reso-
lution was passed suspending exportation to all the recal-
citrant provinces, St. John's Parish was expressly exempted
from its terms.
The resolution applied to the rest of
Georgia, to Quebec, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, St. John's
Isle, East and West Florida, and the British fisheries on the
American coasts. 4 Thus, so far as action of Congress
could effect it, the export trade of the twelve Associated
Provinces was withheld from these parts. The provincial
congress of New Jersey took occasion on May 26 to recom-
mend to the people of that province to adhere " religiously"
to the resolution,6 and the Virginia House of Burgesses
took a similar step on June 19. 3 On June 7, the Wilming-
ton, N. C. , committee voted to withhold all exportations
destined for the British army and navy, for Newfoundland,
and for the northern provinces from whence provisions
could be had for these purposes. 7
14 Am. Arch. , vol. ii, p. 469; also N. Y. Journ. , May 4, 1775.
1 Purdie's Va. Gas. , July 7, 1775, and N. Y. Journ. , June I; also 4 Am.
Arch. , vol. ii, pp. 622, 634.
1 He was not permitted to vote in cases where the ballot was taken
by provinces. Journals, vol. ii, pp. 44-45, 49-50.
4 Ibid. , vol. ii, p. 54.
1 N. Y. Gas. , May 29, 1775; also / AT. /. Arch. , vol. x, pp. 597-598.
? 4 Am. Arch. , vol. ii, p. 1221.
1 AT. C. Col. Recs. , vol. x, p. 12.
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? IN THE PLANTATION PROVINCES 533
These resolutions, it would appear, were excellently kept.
For example, the Philadelphia committee in May prevented
the departure of two cargoes intended for Newfoundland;l
and in September the New York committee held up for
public neglect the owners of two vessels that had been
trading with Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. 2 The effect
of the boycott was not what had been expected. Deep dis-
tress was experienced at Newfoundland and the various
fishing settlements because of their reliance on New Eng-
land for food; but after a time the British government suc-
ceeded in affording them some relief, and they were also
surreptitiously aided by the enterprise of Nantucket fisher-
men. * The people of East Florida also found themselves
temporarily in want of provisions. 4 Quebec and Nova
Scotia, as has been already noted, probably felt no serious
inconvenience and were, on the other hand, receiving en-
hanced prices in the West Indies for their grain, flour and
flax-seed. * Only Georgia found herself in distress, with-
out prospect of relief, and torn by civil discord. But Geor-
gia's adhesion to the Continental Association was to come
only through the shock caused by the outbreak of hostilities.
1 Journals, vol. ii, p. 52.
1N. Y. Gas. , Sept. 4, 1775; also 4 Am. Arch. , vol. iii, pp. 622-624.
* Letters from Newfoundland in N. Y. Journ. , June 29, Aug. 24, 1775.
English exports to Newfoundland increased from ? 77,263 in 1774 to
? 130. 280 in 1775. Macpherson, Annals of Com. , vol. iii, pp. 564, 585.
The act of 16 George III, c. 37, permitted the exportation of peas and
biscuit to Newfoundland, Nova Scotia and Labrador.
1 4 Am. Arch. , vol. iii, pp. 703-707. English exports to Florida in-
creased from ? 52,149 in 1774 to ? 85,254 in 1775. Macpherson, op. cit. ,
vol. iii, pp. 564, 585.
'4 Am. Arch. , vol. i, pp. 1164-1165; Pub. Rec. Off. , C. O. 5, no. 138
(L. C. Transcripts), p. 404. At Quebec English imports increased from
? 307. 635 in 1774 to ? 472,368 in 1775; at Nova Scotia, from ? 47,148 to
? 56. 308. Macpherson, op. cit. , vol. iii, pp. 564, 585.
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? 534 THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1776
Before the Continental Association had been in effect
many weeks it had become perfectly evident not only that
provinces and towns that held aloof from the Association
must be boycotted but that a close degree of co-operation
must be maintained among the Associated Provinces in
order to prevent evasions of the compact by means of the
coastwise trade. About the middle of November, 1774, a
Salem merchant engaged in coastwise trade with Virginia
requested of the Salem Committee of Correspondence a
certificate vouching for his firmness in the cause of Amer-
ical liberty, so that he might carry it with him. This being
an innovation, the Salem committee consulted with the
Boston Committee of Correspondence; and the reply was
a whole-hearted endorsement of the plan and the suggestion
that the device be regularly employed. 1 The committees of
the other provinces fell in with the plan sooner or later,
Providence, Rhode Island,2 and the Virginia counties being
among the first. * The best form of certificate was that
prescribed by the Philadelphia committee in June, 1775.
The importer of merchandise into that metropolis was re-
quired either to produce a certificate from the committee
from whence the goods had come signifying that they had
been imported into America in accordance with the Asso-
ciation, or to produce a qualification, taken before a magis-
trate, testifying to the identity of the goods, the time of
importation into America, and the name of the vessel in
which they had been brought. 4 A few months later, when
the object was not only to safeguard the Association but
also to prevent provisions and merchandise from reaching
1 Bos. Com. Cor. Papers, vol. iii, pp. 651, 653.
1R. I. Col. Recs. , vol. vii, pp. 285-287.
'Richmond. Westmoreland, Prince William, Prince George and
Accomack. Vide the Virginia newspapers, Feb. -June, 1775, passim.
4 Pa. Eve. Post, June 8, 1775; also 4 Am. Arch. , vol. ii, pp. 909-910.
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? IN THE PLANTATION PROVINCES
535
the British army, the provincial bodies of Massachusetts
and New York required that coastwise traders should give
bond that the goods they took away would be landed at the
destination named. 1 These precautions aided greatly in
simplifying the enforcement of the Association for indi-
vidual provinces.
It is now possible to reach some conclusions with refer-
ence to the workings of the Continental Association in the
twelve Associated Provinces during the first four and a half
months. In general, the situation bore a very hopeful
aspect for those Americans who believed that the salvation
of British America depended upon an effective administra-
tion of the Association. The administrative machinery of
the Association had been established in the twelve prov-
inces; and all features of the document, which were in-
tended to have a coercive effect upon the mother country,
were being vigorously enforced. Indeed, the Association
was receiving a more faithful obedience than the provincial
laws ordinarily did, as many a royal governor mournfully
testified. While it has not been possible to obtain statistics
confined to the period of non-importation which is now
being particularly examined, yet the comparative figures of
importations during the years 1774 and 1775 are a sugges-
tive index to the true condition of affairs. English imports
fell off from ? 562,476 in 1774 to ? 71,625 in 1775 in the
New England provinces; from ? 437,937 to ? 1,228 at New
York; from ? 625,652 to ? 1,366 at Philadelphia; from
? 528,738 to ? 1,921 in Maryland and Virginia; and from
? 378,116 to ? 6,245 in the Carolinas.
? ? Generated for (University of Chicago) on 2014-08-19 01:37 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/mdp. 39015011480665 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? 528
THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1776
mous resolution vesting the local committees of observation
with complete control over prosecutions for debt. No
action for debt should be commenced in the court of com-
mon pleas, nor any such action begun there since the Sep-
tember return should be proceeded in, without the consent
of the parish or district committee. In certain cases the
committees were instructed to permit prosecution: when-
ever debtors refused to renew their obligations or to give
reasonable security; when they were justly suspected of an
intention to depart the province or defraud their creditors;
or whenever there should appear any other reasonable cause
for granting permission. 1
The only action in behalf of domestic production ema-
nated from the provincial congress in January. The in-
habitants were asked to give a preference to their own
manufactures, to cultivate cotton, hemp, wheat, barley and
hops, and to kill no sheep for sale after March I following.
A resolution was passed to employ storekeepers at Charles-
ton, Georgetown and Beaufort to buy all the wool that
might be brought to them, at stated rates, and to sell the
wool to weavers at cost price; and also to market domestic
linens, woolens and cottons without charge to the manu-
facturers. 8 Apparently not so much attention was paid to
the sumptuary regulations as in Virginia and Maryland.
However, the mourning regulations were widely observed.
Also, at Charleston the concerts of the St. Coecilia Society
were suspended; and the races at Georgetown were called
off. 1
All things considered, the statement of the General Com-
mittee in a letter to the Committee of Sixty at New York
1 4 Am. Arch. , vol. i, p. 1113.
1Ibid. , vol. i, pp. 1112-1113, 1116.
8 5. C. Co*. , Nov. 21, Dec. 19, 1774.
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? IN THE PLANTATION PROVINCES
529
on March 1, 1775, seems well substantiated so far as the
essential features of the Association were concerned. "We
have the pleasure to inform you," the letter said, "that in
this colony the Association takes place as effectually as law
itself. . . . We may assure you of our fixed determination
to adhere to the resolutions at all hazards; and that minis-
terial opposition is here obliged to be silent. " 1
While the Continental Association was being put into
operation in the twelve Associated Provinces, certain
other parts of continental British America, of lesser im-
portance, held sternly aloof from the movement. This
brought into operation the comprehensive boycott recom-
mended by Article xiv against dissentient provinces. South
Carolina was most intimately concerned in the failure of
Georgia to join the league of provinces, as the staples of
the two provinces were the same. Therefore, on February
8, 1775, the General Committee at Charleston decreed that
thereafter all "Trade, Commerce, Dealings or Intercourse"
should cease with the inhabitants of that province. 2
A few weeks later delegates from St. John's Parish in
Georgia arrived in Charleston and sought to show reason
to the General Committee why St. John's Parish should be
exempted from the boycott. They contended that Article
xiv should "be considered as a general rule only, and as
respects this Province [Georgia] considered in a mixed or
promiscuous sense; but, as we of this Parish are a body
detached from the rest by our Resolutions and Association,
and sufficiently distinct by local situation, large enough for
particular notice . . . , adjoining a sea-port . . . , there-
1 N. Y. Journ. , Apr. 6, 1775; also 4 Am. Arch. , vol. ii, p. 2.
1Ibid. , vol. i, p. 1163; also S. C. Gas. , Mch. 6, 1775. South Caro-
linians, owning plantations in Georgia or having debts due from there,
? were specifically exempted from the terms of the resolution.
? ? Generated for (University of Chicago) on 2014-08-19 01:37 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/mdp. 39015011480665 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? 530 THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1776
fore we must be considered as comprehended within the
spirit and equitable meaning of the Continental Associa-
tion. " But the General Committee felt constrained to ad-
here to a literal interpretation of the Association, and ad-
vised the people of St. John's to present their case before
the ensuing Continental Congress. 1 This course the St.
John's committee perforce determined to adopt. Meantime,
being denied trade with South Carolina, the parish found it
impossible to subsist without some limited trading connec-
tions with the merchants at Savannah; and so they were
forced to forego an absolute boycott for a carefully regu-
lated trade under the supervision of a committee especially
appointed for the purpose. 2
Georgia was not the only British province on the conti-
nent to be delinquent on this important occasion, although
it was the only one of the old thirteen in which the Conti-
nental Association was not being effectively executed. The
First Continental Congress had invited Quebec, St. John's
Isle,8 Nova Scotia, and East and West Florida to accede to
the Association; * and the threat of boycott in Article xiv
applied, by its terms, to " any colony or province in North-
America. " Not one of these places was of importance
commercially; but it was deemed desirable by the radical
party that British America should offer a united front to
the mother country. Early in February, 1775, it developed
that there was an inclination among the British merchants
in the city of Quebec to adopt the Association; but no.
1 S. C. Gas. , Mch. 6, 1775; also 4 Am. Arch. , vol. i, pp. 1161-1163.
1 Journals Cont. Cong. (L. C. Edn. ), vol. ii, pp. 45-48. For Gov-
ernor Wright's view of this arrangement, vide White, Ga. Hist. Colls,
p. 523.
1 The early name for Prince Edward Island.
* Journals Cont. Cong. , vol. i, pp. 101, 103, 105-113.
? ? Generated for (University of Chicago) on 2014-08-19 01:37 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/mdp. 39015011480665 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? IN THE PLANTATION PROVINCES
531
action was taken because, 'according to one merchant there,
"it would only serve to throw the trade out of our own
hands into those of the French, who would never listen to
any proposals of that kind but rejoice in such an opportun-
ity to wrest the trade from us. " 1 It was true of all these
regions that, due to a preponderance of aliens in the popu-
lation, a sympathetic understanding of the constitutional
and governmental principles at stake was lacking. Further-
more, the inhabitants relished the prospect of diverting to
themselves the rich trade which had been monopolized by
the older and more populous communities. 2
After a lull of several weeks following the action of
South Carolina with reference to Georgia, the northern
provinces began to pass resolutions of boycott which
affected all the dissentient provinces. On April 17, the
Philadelphia committee served warning on the local mer-
chants that such a measure impended; and ten days later
a resolution was adopted for suspending all exportation to
Georgia, Quebec, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and all parts
of the fishing coasts and fishing islands until the Continental
Congress should direct otherwise. 8 The fisheries were in-
cluded in the boycott because of the news, recently received,
of the act of Parliament restraining New England from
the fisheries. On May 1, the Maryland provincial conven-
tion passed a similar resolution, and in turn extended the
boycott to include the town of Boston, which was now
occupied by the British forces as an armed camp after the
fighting at Lexington and Concord. 4 On the same day the
1Letter of Dec. 24, 1774, Pa. Packet, Feb. 13, 1775; also Mass. Ga*.
& Post-Boy, Feb. 27.
1? . g. , vide Pub. Rec. Off. , C. O. 5, no. 138 (L. C. Transcripts),
p. 404; 4 Am. Arch. , vol. i, pp. 1164-1165.
3Ibid. , vol. ii, pp. 338, 421; also Pa. Eve. Post, Apr. 18, 29, 1775.
* Md. Gas. , May 4, 1775; also 4 Am. Arch. , vol. ii, p. 380.
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? 53-5
THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1776
New York committee took like action;l and the committees
of Cumberland County, Va. , and Newark, N. J. , followed
later in the month. 2
When the Second Continental Congress assembled on the
tenth of May, one of the first questions that had to be
settled concerned the status of St. John's Parish under the
Association. Dr. Lyman Hall presented himself as the
delegate of the parish, and his admission to the membership
was voted unanimously. 8 On the seventeenth when a reso-
lution was passed suspending exportation to all the recal-
citrant provinces, St. John's Parish was expressly exempted
from its terms.
The resolution applied to the rest of
Georgia, to Quebec, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, St. John's
Isle, East and West Florida, and the British fisheries on the
American coasts. 4 Thus, so far as action of Congress
could effect it, the export trade of the twelve Associated
Provinces was withheld from these parts. The provincial
congress of New Jersey took occasion on May 26 to recom-
mend to the people of that province to adhere " religiously"
to the resolution,6 and the Virginia House of Burgesses
took a similar step on June 19. 3 On June 7, the Wilming-
ton, N. C. , committee voted to withhold all exportations
destined for the British army and navy, for Newfoundland,
and for the northern provinces from whence provisions
could be had for these purposes. 7
14 Am. Arch. , vol. ii, p. 469; also N. Y. Journ. , May 4, 1775.
1 Purdie's Va. Gas. , July 7, 1775, and N. Y. Journ. , June I; also 4 Am.
Arch. , vol. ii, pp. 622, 634.
1 He was not permitted to vote in cases where the ballot was taken
by provinces. Journals, vol. ii, pp. 44-45, 49-50.
4 Ibid. , vol. ii, p. 54.
1 N. Y. Gas. , May 29, 1775; also / AT. /. Arch. , vol. x, pp. 597-598.
? 4 Am. Arch. , vol. ii, p. 1221.
1 AT. C. Col. Recs. , vol. x, p. 12.
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? IN THE PLANTATION PROVINCES 533
These resolutions, it would appear, were excellently kept.
For example, the Philadelphia committee in May prevented
the departure of two cargoes intended for Newfoundland;l
and in September the New York committee held up for
public neglect the owners of two vessels that had been
trading with Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. 2 The effect
of the boycott was not what had been expected. Deep dis-
tress was experienced at Newfoundland and the various
fishing settlements because of their reliance on New Eng-
land for food; but after a time the British government suc-
ceeded in affording them some relief, and they were also
surreptitiously aided by the enterprise of Nantucket fisher-
men. * The people of East Florida also found themselves
temporarily in want of provisions. 4 Quebec and Nova
Scotia, as has been already noted, probably felt no serious
inconvenience and were, on the other hand, receiving en-
hanced prices in the West Indies for their grain, flour and
flax-seed. * Only Georgia found herself in distress, with-
out prospect of relief, and torn by civil discord. But Geor-
gia's adhesion to the Continental Association was to come
only through the shock caused by the outbreak of hostilities.
1 Journals, vol. ii, p. 52.
1N. Y. Gas. , Sept. 4, 1775; also 4 Am. Arch. , vol. iii, pp. 622-624.
* Letters from Newfoundland in N. Y. Journ. , June 29, Aug. 24, 1775.
English exports to Newfoundland increased from ? 77,263 in 1774 to
? 130. 280 in 1775. Macpherson, Annals of Com. , vol. iii, pp. 564, 585.
The act of 16 George III, c. 37, permitted the exportation of peas and
biscuit to Newfoundland, Nova Scotia and Labrador.
1 4 Am. Arch. , vol. iii, pp. 703-707. English exports to Florida in-
creased from ? 52,149 in 1774 to ? 85,254 in 1775. Macpherson, op. cit. ,
vol. iii, pp. 564, 585.
'4 Am. Arch. , vol. i, pp. 1164-1165; Pub. Rec. Off. , C. O. 5, no. 138
(L. C. Transcripts), p. 404. At Quebec English imports increased from
? 307. 635 in 1774 to ? 472,368 in 1775; at Nova Scotia, from ? 47,148 to
? 56. 308. Macpherson, op. cit. , vol. iii, pp. 564, 585.
? ? Generated for (University of Chicago) on 2014-08-19 01:37 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/mdp. 39015011480665 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? 534 THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1776
Before the Continental Association had been in effect
many weeks it had become perfectly evident not only that
provinces and towns that held aloof from the Association
must be boycotted but that a close degree of co-operation
must be maintained among the Associated Provinces in
order to prevent evasions of the compact by means of the
coastwise trade. About the middle of November, 1774, a
Salem merchant engaged in coastwise trade with Virginia
requested of the Salem Committee of Correspondence a
certificate vouching for his firmness in the cause of Amer-
ical liberty, so that he might carry it with him. This being
an innovation, the Salem committee consulted with the
Boston Committee of Correspondence; and the reply was
a whole-hearted endorsement of the plan and the suggestion
that the device be regularly employed. 1 The committees of
the other provinces fell in with the plan sooner or later,
Providence, Rhode Island,2 and the Virginia counties being
among the first. * The best form of certificate was that
prescribed by the Philadelphia committee in June, 1775.
The importer of merchandise into that metropolis was re-
quired either to produce a certificate from the committee
from whence the goods had come signifying that they had
been imported into America in accordance with the Asso-
ciation, or to produce a qualification, taken before a magis-
trate, testifying to the identity of the goods, the time of
importation into America, and the name of the vessel in
which they had been brought. 4 A few months later, when
the object was not only to safeguard the Association but
also to prevent provisions and merchandise from reaching
1 Bos. Com. Cor. Papers, vol. iii, pp. 651, 653.
1R. I. Col. Recs. , vol. vii, pp. 285-287.
'Richmond. Westmoreland, Prince William, Prince George and
Accomack. Vide the Virginia newspapers, Feb. -June, 1775, passim.
4 Pa. Eve. Post, June 8, 1775; also 4 Am. Arch. , vol. ii, pp. 909-910.
? ? Generated for (University of Chicago) on 2014-08-19 01:37 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/mdp. 39015011480665 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? IN THE PLANTATION PROVINCES
535
the British army, the provincial bodies of Massachusetts
and New York required that coastwise traders should give
bond that the goods they took away would be landed at the
destination named. 1 These precautions aided greatly in
simplifying the enforcement of the Association for indi-
vidual provinces.
It is now possible to reach some conclusions with refer-
ence to the workings of the Continental Association in the
twelve Associated Provinces during the first four and a half
months. In general, the situation bore a very hopeful
aspect for those Americans who believed that the salvation
of British America depended upon an effective administra-
tion of the Association. The administrative machinery of
the Association had been established in the twelve prov-
inces; and all features of the document, which were in-
tended to have a coercive effect upon the mother country,
were being vigorously enforced. Indeed, the Association
was receiving a more faithful obedience than the provincial
laws ordinarily did, as many a royal governor mournfully
testified. While it has not been possible to obtain statistics
confined to the period of non-importation which is now
being particularly examined, yet the comparative figures of
importations during the years 1774 and 1775 are a sugges-
tive index to the true condition of affairs. English imports
fell off from ? 562,476 in 1774 to ? 71,625 in 1775 in the
New England provinces; from ? 437,937 to ? 1,228 at New
York; from ? 625,652 to ? 1,366 at Philadelphia; from
? 528,738 to ? 1,921 in Maryland and Virginia; and from
? 378,116 to ? 6,245 in the Carolinas.