There
were no published accounts of efforts to enforce these latter restric-
tions.
were no published accounts of efforts to enforce these latter restric-
tions.
Arthur Schlesinger - Colonial Merchants and the American Revolution
19 to July 9, 1770.
1 Abington, Attleborough, Billerica, Brookfield, Cambridge, Gloucester,
Groton, Hingham, Lancaster, Medford, Milton, Pembroke, Plymouth,
Roxbury, Salisbury, Sandwich, Sudbury.
1 Andover, Boxford, Danvers, Taunton.
4 N. Y. Gas. & Merc. , Mch. 20, 1769. For names of the committeemen,
vide Becker, N. Y. Parties, 1760-1776, p. 75, n. 106.
* P. Curtenius to Boston Committee of Correspondence, Aug. 26, 1774.
Bos. Com. Cor. Papers (N. Y. Pub. Libr. ), vol. ii, pp. 381-385.
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? NON-IMPORTATION
The operations of the committee of inspection differed
from those of its counterpart in Boston chiefly in requir-
ing merchandise, imported contrary to the agreement, to
be kept in a public store under the lock and key of the com-
mittee. This arrangement placed a stopper on a possible
leakage of stored goods, and created public confidence in the
good faith of the non-importing merchants. In the New
York Journal, May 11, 1769, the committee stated officially
that the several vessels which had lately arrived had brought
some packages upon consignment, which were under ban of
the agreement and which had been placed in the public
store, in all but one or two instances. 1 The New York
Gazette and Weekly Mercury of May 8 averred that the
dutied goods imported in the preceding fall amounted to
some hundreds of pounds sterling but that the amount did
"not exceed 40s. this Spring. " Later in the year, ship
masters whose cargoes contained prohibited articles found
it necessary to publish sworn statements, explaining and ex-
cusing their inadvertence. 2
The most difficult problem that the committee of in-
spection dealt with was to prevent clandestine importations
from neighboring provinces, Pennsylvania in particular.
Since the Philadelphia agreement went into effect four
months after New York, there was a constant temptation
to introduce into New York goods that had been imported
at Philadelphia later than was permitted by the local agree-
ment. Such an instance caused "uneasiness" among the
inhabitants in April, 1769, and the offending merchant
1 The public were asked to boycott these delinquents and all those
who traded with them. For the enforcement of the agreement upon
the arrival of the Britannia from London, April 29, 1769 (probably
the first case of enforcing non-importation), vide N. Y. Gas. & Merc. ,
May 1. 1769; Bos. Chron. , May 15.
'Vide two instances in AT. Y. Gas. & Merc. , Nov. 20, 1769.
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? THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1776
"voluntarily" returned the goods to Philadelphia. 1 Two
months later, the committee commended to the public the
action of Peter Clopper, for returning to Philadelphia, of
his own accord, some fineries which he had purchased there
for his family. 2 Alexander Robertson, another merchant,
was not so tractable. Some New Jersey people examined
his casks of goods in transit from Philadelphia and re-
ported the nature of his shipment to the committee of in-
spection. With an air of injured surprise, he avowed to
the committee his innocence of evil intent, implored the
pardon of the public in a published statement, and agreed
to send back the goods. It quickly developed that he did
conscientiously return the casks, but their contents remained
in the cellar of the ferry-house for a later introduction into
New York. This duplicity brought upon him all the rigors
of a boycott. 8
The shopkeepers and other inhabitants had adopted an
agreement which confirmed and buttressed the merchants'
combination. This element of the population soon began
to grow impatient with the deliberate measures of the mer-
chants, and they recalled with relish the swift effective meth-
ods of Stamp Act days. When, therefore, the silversmith,
Simeon Cooley, was proscribed by the committee on July
20, 1769, for insolent defiance of non-importation, it did not
seem sufficient to the inhabitants in general that his behavior
should be dismissed with a declaration of boycott. A mass
meeting was held the following day in the Fields to treat
with him; and when he refused to appear for fear of per-
sonal violence, the crowd moved en masse upon his house.
1 N. Y. Gas. & Merc. , Apr. 17, 1769.
1 N. Y. Journ. , June 29, 1769.
? Af. Y. Gas. &? Merc. , June 19, 1769; N. Y. Journ. , June 29, July 6;
Bos. News-Letter, June 29. For Willett's offense of a similar char-
acter, vide N. Y. Gas. & Merc. , July 17.
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? NON-IMPORTATION Igg
Fleeing to the fort, he prevailed upon Major Pitcairn to send
a file of soldiers to guard the house; but these were suddenly
withdrawn, apparently upon sober second thought of the
military. Cooley agreed to meet the crowd the next after-
noon; and there he "publickly acknowledged his Crimes;
. . . engaged to store an Equivalent to the Goods he had
sold, together with all those he had in Possession," and to
conduct himself faultlessly in the future. The boycott re-
mained; and two months later he disposed of his business
and departed in disgust for Jamaica with a pocket-book
much the lighter for his pertinacity. 1 On September 19,
an assemblage of inhabitants again met to deal with a
jeweller who had been proscribed by the merchants. A
scaffold was erected near Liberty Pole; the culprit, Thomas
Richardson by name, was then called before them; and,
mounted on the rostrum, he discovered a readiness to ask
the forgiveness of the public and to agree to store his goods. 8
With each ajp1rnt:"i pf nT? K IrT^the merchants as a_class
_beramp rrmrp fgajfnl. The employment of violence was
not a part of their program for obtaining trade reforms;
they had every reason to desire to hold the populace in leash.
As events progressed, the rift between the merchants and
the " Sons of Liberty" widened. As Colden remarked, at
this time, of attempts to instigate violence, " People in gen-
eral, especially they of property, are aware of the dangerous
Consequences of such riotous and mobish proceedings. " *
On Tuesday, June 26, 1770, a transient named Hills was de-
tected in the act of peddling wares debarred by the agree-
1N. Y. Jo1trn. , July 20, 1/69; AT. Y. Gas. & Merc. , July 24, Sept. 18.
Cooley's version, first published in the London Public Ledger, may
fee found in Mass. Gas. & News-Letter, Nov. 23.
1N. Y. Journ. , Sept. 21, 1769.
* Colden, Letter Books, vol. ii, p. 200.
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? I90 THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1776
ment, and on the demand of the committee of inspection he
surrendered his goods, worth almost ? 200, to be stored.
About one o'clock that night a number of persons in dis-
guise took forcible possession of the goods and committed
the whole to the flames. Without further warning, Hills
fled the town. The committee of inspection made this the
occasion for a solemn preachment and warning. In a
signed statement, the midnight visitation was stigmatized
as " a high Insult" offered to the committee and to the city
by "some lawless Ruffians," and every good citizen was
urged to do all in his power " to bring the Authors, Aiders
and Abettors of so unwarrantable an Act to speedy Justice. "1
Naturally the offenders continued undiscovered; but these
new instances of mob assertion had a controlling influence
on the course of the merchants in the subsequent years.
There is every reason to believe that non-importation was
exceedingly well enforced in New York. The committee
had no difficulty to contend with, except the greed of those
merchants who sought to import goods at the prevailing high
prices. It was claimed in December, 1769, that every bit of
goods brought in contrary to the agreement had been placed
in the public store. 2 Although this high standard of per-
fection was not reached, the figures show that the importa-
tions from Great Britain in 1769 had fallen to ? 75,930, as
compared with ? 490,673 in the preceding year, a record
which was not equalled or even approached in any other
province. 8
1 N. - Y. Journ. , June 28, July 5, 1770.
1Letter from New York; Mass. Gas. & News-L<<tter, Dec. 21, 1769.
1 Macpherson, Annals of Com. , vol. iii, pp. 486, 494-495. The British
importations into New York in 1770 amounted to ? 475,991. Ibid. , p.
508. It is, of course, impossible to know what proportion of the
goods imported during these years was permissible under the agree-
ment. It will be remembered that the agreement was also directed
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? NON-IMPORTATION Io,1
In Philadelphia the opposition to non-importation, once
that measure had been adopted, was even milder in char-
acter. The body of merchants were its hearty supporters,
although there was a pronounced feeling on the part of the
importers of British drygoods that the provisions of the local
agreement discriminated unjustly against them. Their com-
plaint was that their commerce was cut off, while the mer-
chants who traded with the West Indies and the Wine
Islands continued their business as before the agreement;
and they pointed out that these prospering traders were
paying duties upon importations of molasses and wines and
thus counteracting the principle of home rule in taxation,
for which the Americans professed to be fighting. More-
over, the merchants of Maryland and Albany, acting under
more liberal agreements, were importing goods for the In-
dian trade, a privilege that was denied to the Philadelphia
merchants. 1 Their dissatisfaction with the agreement took
the form of efforts to modify it or repeal it rather than
clandestine attempts to violate it.
The Society of Friends, in which some of the great mer-
chants were very influential, found an early occasion to take
an official stand against it. At the time of the Stamp Act,
more than fifty of them, including such prominent Quakers
as Israel and James Pemberton, had signed the agreement;
and indeed the measure appeared to be a Quaker method of
resistance. But the present agreement was more rigorous
in its terms; and when the Charming Polly episode disclosed
that the populace, most of whom " were incapable of judg-
ing prudently on a matter of so great importance," might
against smuggled importations from Hamburg and Holland.
There
were no published accounts of efforts to enforce these latter restric-
tions. "A. B. " in the N. Y. Journ. , Nov. 23, 1760, made an incidental
reference to the storing of large consignments from foreign merchants.
1 Pa. Gas. , Jan. 25, 1770; Pa. Mag. , vol. xiv, p. 42.
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? I92 THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1776
be called in to exert force in executing the agreement, the
monthly meeting of Philadelphia advised Friends to have
nothing to do with non-importation measures. 1 Neverthe-
less, many prominent Quakers were concerned in the agree-
ment, including John Reynell who headed the committee
of inspection.
The Philadelphia merchants established an excellent rec-
ord of enforcement. On Monday, July 17, 1769, occurred
the first effort to violate the agreement, when the Charming
Polly with a cargo of malt arrived in port. Amos Strettell,
the consignee, was able to show that he had not ordered
the malt; and at a public meeting the following day the
brewers of the city presented an agreement that they would
have none of it. The meeting voted unanimously that any
person who bought any of the malt or helped to unload it
should be deemed an "Enemy to his Country. " A week
later, the captain of the brig, not perhaps lacking a sense of
humor, sailed with his malt to Cork. 2 On July 29, the brig
Speedwell arrived with some debarred goods, which had been
ordered prior to the agreement; these were placed in a
public store. 8
The expeditious return of imports commended itself as
a better device than the storing of them on either the New
York or the Boston plan. The Philadelphia Committee
believed it would defeat the scheme of " some monied peo-
ple" in England " to buy up quantities of manufactures on
easy terms and lodge them in the principal towns in America
to be ready for the first opening of the markets after the
repeal. " * Therefore, at a meeting of August 2, the mer-
1 Sharpless, I. , The Quakers in the Revolution (Philadelphia, 1899),
pp. 77-80; Lincoln, Revolutionary Movement in Pa. , p. 151.
1 Pa. Journ. , July 20, 1769; also N. Y. Ga*. & Merc. , July 24.
1Pa. Journ. , Aug. 3, 1769.
4 Papers of Phila. Merchants, pp. 29-31.
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? NON-IMPORTATION
chants decided that all goods, which arrived from England
on consignment or which had been ordered after February
6, should not be stored as other goods but should be sent
back. 1 This plan was followed thereafter. A notable case
of enforcement occurred when the Friend's Good Will ar-
rived on September 30 with a great quantity of merchandise
shipped by British merchants on speculation. These goods
were said to have been offered to eighty-four merchants in
vain; and the brig returned with her cargo intact. 2 In
December, the signers of the agreement authorized the com-
mittee to auction off such stored goods as were likely to
perish from prolonged storing, the profits of such sale to
be devoted to some public use. 8
The committee of inspection continued its activities far
into the year 1770 and did not find it necessary to proscribe
offenders by name until June of that year. 4 Statistics show
that British imports had been reduced in value from ? 441,-
829 in 1768 to ? 204,978 in the year 1769, and to ? 134,881
in 1770. 8 Next to New York, this was the best record of
any province for the year 1769, and the best record on the
continent for the year 1770. The enforcement of non-
importation was free from all exhibitions of mob violence,
1 Pa. Gas. , Aug. 3, 1769; also Pa. Journ. , Aug. 3.
* Pa. lourn. , Oct. 5, 1769; 5. C. Gas. , Nov. 16. The committee of
inspection also had to be watchful to detect fraudulent practices on
the part of British merchants. In one instance, Stephen Collins
solemnly informed the London merchant, Samuel Elam, "thy Brother
Emanuel was found' to have antedated his Invoices and Letters in
sutch a manner as to Lead people here [to] talke very freely of them. "
A few months later, he returned a bale of cloth sent by Samuel Elam
himself contrary to orders, with the admonition: "I am realy sorry
for thy sake it has happened, as many people seem mutch Disaffected. "
Collins, Letter Book 1760-1773, Sept. 18, Dec, 11, 1769.
1 Papers of Phila. Merchants, pp. 64-67.
? E. g. , vide Pa. Journ. , July 5, 12, 28, 1770.
1 Macpherson, Annals of Com. , vol. iii, pp. 485, 494-495, 508.
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? THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1776
largely because goods violative of the agreement were im-
mediately re-shipped to Great Britain.
Of the minor provinces in the commercial group, New
Hampshire took a belated stand on the side of non-importa-
tion when the emotions of the people were deeply stirred
by the news of the Boston Massacre. As late as February,
1770, Governor Wentworth had written that some Scotch
merchants were plying a trade in imported wares undis-
turbed. 1 After the fateful fifth of March, all indifference
vanished among the people. "The cry of Blood, reechoed
from one to the other, seems to infuriate them," wrote the
governor. "Upon this event the Assembly were prevailed
upon to forward their petition, which would otherwise have
slept forever; the people will not be persuaded but that the
Commissioners of the Customs and the Revenue Acts are
exerted to destroy the lives and absorb the property of the
people. " 2 The first action was taken by town meetings at
New Ipswich and Exeter, two towns located not far from
the Massachusetts line. New Ipswich was a sparsely settled
township with trading relations solely with Boston; and on
March 19, they resolved to purchase no articles forbidden
by the Boston agreement and to boycott all importers. 8
The inhabitants of Exeter, notwithstanding the reputation
they enjoyed of living up to " the tip top of the Fashion,""
agreed a week later to discourage the use of foreign luxuries
and to stop totally the consumption of tea until the duty
should be removed. 4 No action was taken by Portsmouth,
the chief port, until McMasters, a proscribed importer of
1 Vide supra, p. 155.
1Brit. Papers ("Sparks Mss. "), voL i, p. 17. Letter of Apr. 12, 1770
to Hillsborough.
1 Bos. Eve. Post, Apr. 9, 1770.
4 N. H. Gas. , Apr. 1. 3, May 11, 1770.
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? NON-IMPORTA TION
195
Boston, sought to introduce his wares there. The town
meeting, on April n, resolved to have no dealings with
McMasters or any other importer, and to boycott vendue
masters and coasting vessels that were in any way connected
with them. They even threatened to cancel the licenses of
tavern-keepers who permitted such goods to be exposed
for sale in their houses. 1 The movement in New Hamp-
shire partook too much of the nature of an emotional revival
to be lasting in its effects; and, as we shall see, the merchants
at Portsmouth resumed importation as soon as the excite-
ment subsided.
Of the remaining northern provinces, Rhode Island was
the only province whose conduct resembled, in any respect,
that of New Hampshire. Dragged into the non-importa-
tion league by threats of boycott by the great trading-towns,
the merchants at Newport regarded their tardy agreement
with keenest disrelish. Hutchinson voiced the common
opinion of other provinces when he said: "Rhode Island
professed to Join but privatelv imported to their great
ga1n. 2 When John Maudsley, a member of the Sons of
Liberty, returned from London with goods forbidden by
the agreement, which had been adopted during his absence,
he " cheerfully submitted" the goods to be stored, accord-
ing to the account in the Newport Mercury, April 9, 1770.
But if "Americanus," of Swanzey, is to be believed in the
Boston Gasette, May 7, the goods in question were placed
in Maudsley's store on the wharf, and, after dark, were
carted to his house, immediately opened and publicly sold
to almost every shop in Newport, unnoticed by the Mer-
chants' Committee. This tale bears the color of truth.
Certain it is that the Merchants' Committee at Newport
1 N. H. Gas. , Apr. 13, 1770; also Bos. Eve. Post, Apr. 16.
1Mass. Bay, voL iii, p. 261 n.
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? 196 THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1778
never displayed any noticeable activity in detecting tabooed
importations.
All evidence would indicate that New Jersey, the Dela-
ware Counties and Connecticut were true to their profes-
sions of non-importation and non-consumption. In the case
of Connecticut, "A Freeman of Connecticut " wrote in July,
1770, with every assurance of truth, that the various agree-
ments of the towns had been kept "save in three or four
trivial instances, inadvertently and inconsiderately done;
and in every instance, one excepted, public satisfaction has
been given and the goods stored. " 1 The exception was a
small importation of tea from Boston.
1 Conn. Courant, July 30, 1770. A case, which gained local notoriety,
was the importation of some coarse woolens by Mr. Verstille, of Weath-
ersfield, a man who had been in England when the non-importation
agreement was adopted As the merits of the case were not at all
clear, some merchants cut the knot by buying the goods from Verstille
and placing them in store at their expense. Ibid. , Mch. 5.
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? CHAPTER V
ENFORCEMENT AND BBEAKDOWN OF NON-IMPORTATION
(Continued)
plantation provinces, non-importation and the prob-
jems of its enforcement wel'tf llllllll leii. a bart ot the fabric
of everyday l1fe flp" m t^e mmrnercial provinces. The
agreements and associations had been promoted by the plant-
ing class in opposition to the small, active mercantile class;
and in the general absence of trading centres, it was difficult
for the planting element to implant the fear of discipline
in the hearts of the merchants. The geographical distribu-
tion of southern society deprived the planters of the oppor-
tunity of exerting their influence compactly, except at the
periodical meetings of the legislative assemblies. Further-
more, since the economic discontent in the South was not
directly traceable to the Townshend duties and restrictions,
a literal obedience to the agreements did not always seem
imperative to the planters themselves.
1 Abington, Attleborough, Billerica, Brookfield, Cambridge, Gloucester,
Groton, Hingham, Lancaster, Medford, Milton, Pembroke, Plymouth,
Roxbury, Salisbury, Sandwich, Sudbury.
1 Andover, Boxford, Danvers, Taunton.
4 N. Y. Gas. & Merc. , Mch. 20, 1769. For names of the committeemen,
vide Becker, N. Y. Parties, 1760-1776, p. 75, n. 106.
* P. Curtenius to Boston Committee of Correspondence, Aug. 26, 1774.
Bos. Com. Cor. Papers (N. Y. Pub. Libr. ), vol. ii, pp. 381-385.
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? NON-IMPORTATION
The operations of the committee of inspection differed
from those of its counterpart in Boston chiefly in requir-
ing merchandise, imported contrary to the agreement, to
be kept in a public store under the lock and key of the com-
mittee. This arrangement placed a stopper on a possible
leakage of stored goods, and created public confidence in the
good faith of the non-importing merchants. In the New
York Journal, May 11, 1769, the committee stated officially
that the several vessels which had lately arrived had brought
some packages upon consignment, which were under ban of
the agreement and which had been placed in the public
store, in all but one or two instances. 1 The New York
Gazette and Weekly Mercury of May 8 averred that the
dutied goods imported in the preceding fall amounted to
some hundreds of pounds sterling but that the amount did
"not exceed 40s. this Spring. " Later in the year, ship
masters whose cargoes contained prohibited articles found
it necessary to publish sworn statements, explaining and ex-
cusing their inadvertence. 2
The most difficult problem that the committee of in-
spection dealt with was to prevent clandestine importations
from neighboring provinces, Pennsylvania in particular.
Since the Philadelphia agreement went into effect four
months after New York, there was a constant temptation
to introduce into New York goods that had been imported
at Philadelphia later than was permitted by the local agree-
ment. Such an instance caused "uneasiness" among the
inhabitants in April, 1769, and the offending merchant
1 The public were asked to boycott these delinquents and all those
who traded with them. For the enforcement of the agreement upon
the arrival of the Britannia from London, April 29, 1769 (probably
the first case of enforcing non-importation), vide N. Y. Gas. & Merc. ,
May 1. 1769; Bos. Chron. , May 15.
'Vide two instances in AT. Y. Gas. & Merc. , Nov. 20, 1769.
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? THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1776
"voluntarily" returned the goods to Philadelphia. 1 Two
months later, the committee commended to the public the
action of Peter Clopper, for returning to Philadelphia, of
his own accord, some fineries which he had purchased there
for his family. 2 Alexander Robertson, another merchant,
was not so tractable. Some New Jersey people examined
his casks of goods in transit from Philadelphia and re-
ported the nature of his shipment to the committee of in-
spection. With an air of injured surprise, he avowed to
the committee his innocence of evil intent, implored the
pardon of the public in a published statement, and agreed
to send back the goods. It quickly developed that he did
conscientiously return the casks, but their contents remained
in the cellar of the ferry-house for a later introduction into
New York. This duplicity brought upon him all the rigors
of a boycott. 8
The shopkeepers and other inhabitants had adopted an
agreement which confirmed and buttressed the merchants'
combination. This element of the population soon began
to grow impatient with the deliberate measures of the mer-
chants, and they recalled with relish the swift effective meth-
ods of Stamp Act days. When, therefore, the silversmith,
Simeon Cooley, was proscribed by the committee on July
20, 1769, for insolent defiance of non-importation, it did not
seem sufficient to the inhabitants in general that his behavior
should be dismissed with a declaration of boycott. A mass
meeting was held the following day in the Fields to treat
with him; and when he refused to appear for fear of per-
sonal violence, the crowd moved en masse upon his house.
1 N. Y. Gas. & Merc. , Apr. 17, 1769.
1 N. Y. Journ. , June 29, 1769.
? Af. Y. Gas. &? Merc. , June 19, 1769; N. Y. Journ. , June 29, July 6;
Bos. News-Letter, June 29. For Willett's offense of a similar char-
acter, vide N. Y. Gas. & Merc. , July 17.
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? NON-IMPORTATION Igg
Fleeing to the fort, he prevailed upon Major Pitcairn to send
a file of soldiers to guard the house; but these were suddenly
withdrawn, apparently upon sober second thought of the
military. Cooley agreed to meet the crowd the next after-
noon; and there he "publickly acknowledged his Crimes;
. . . engaged to store an Equivalent to the Goods he had
sold, together with all those he had in Possession," and to
conduct himself faultlessly in the future. The boycott re-
mained; and two months later he disposed of his business
and departed in disgust for Jamaica with a pocket-book
much the lighter for his pertinacity. 1 On September 19,
an assemblage of inhabitants again met to deal with a
jeweller who had been proscribed by the merchants. A
scaffold was erected near Liberty Pole; the culprit, Thomas
Richardson by name, was then called before them; and,
mounted on the rostrum, he discovered a readiness to ask
the forgiveness of the public and to agree to store his goods. 8
With each ajp1rnt:"i pf nT? K IrT^the merchants as a_class
_beramp rrmrp fgajfnl. The employment of violence was
not a part of their program for obtaining trade reforms;
they had every reason to desire to hold the populace in leash.
As events progressed, the rift between the merchants and
the " Sons of Liberty" widened. As Colden remarked, at
this time, of attempts to instigate violence, " People in gen-
eral, especially they of property, are aware of the dangerous
Consequences of such riotous and mobish proceedings. " *
On Tuesday, June 26, 1770, a transient named Hills was de-
tected in the act of peddling wares debarred by the agree-
1N. Y. Jo1trn. , July 20, 1/69; AT. Y. Gas. & Merc. , July 24, Sept. 18.
Cooley's version, first published in the London Public Ledger, may
fee found in Mass. Gas. & News-Letter, Nov. 23.
1N. Y. Journ. , Sept. 21, 1769.
* Colden, Letter Books, vol. ii, p. 200.
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? I90 THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1776
ment, and on the demand of the committee of inspection he
surrendered his goods, worth almost ? 200, to be stored.
About one o'clock that night a number of persons in dis-
guise took forcible possession of the goods and committed
the whole to the flames. Without further warning, Hills
fled the town. The committee of inspection made this the
occasion for a solemn preachment and warning. In a
signed statement, the midnight visitation was stigmatized
as " a high Insult" offered to the committee and to the city
by "some lawless Ruffians," and every good citizen was
urged to do all in his power " to bring the Authors, Aiders
and Abettors of so unwarrantable an Act to speedy Justice. "1
Naturally the offenders continued undiscovered; but these
new instances of mob assertion had a controlling influence
on the course of the merchants in the subsequent years.
There is every reason to believe that non-importation was
exceedingly well enforced in New York. The committee
had no difficulty to contend with, except the greed of those
merchants who sought to import goods at the prevailing high
prices. It was claimed in December, 1769, that every bit of
goods brought in contrary to the agreement had been placed
in the public store. 2 Although this high standard of per-
fection was not reached, the figures show that the importa-
tions from Great Britain in 1769 had fallen to ? 75,930, as
compared with ? 490,673 in the preceding year, a record
which was not equalled or even approached in any other
province. 8
1 N. - Y. Journ. , June 28, July 5, 1770.
1Letter from New York; Mass. Gas. & News-L<<tter, Dec. 21, 1769.
1 Macpherson, Annals of Com. , vol. iii, pp. 486, 494-495. The British
importations into New York in 1770 amounted to ? 475,991. Ibid. , p.
508. It is, of course, impossible to know what proportion of the
goods imported during these years was permissible under the agree-
ment. It will be remembered that the agreement was also directed
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? NON-IMPORTATION Io,1
In Philadelphia the opposition to non-importation, once
that measure had been adopted, was even milder in char-
acter. The body of merchants were its hearty supporters,
although there was a pronounced feeling on the part of the
importers of British drygoods that the provisions of the local
agreement discriminated unjustly against them. Their com-
plaint was that their commerce was cut off, while the mer-
chants who traded with the West Indies and the Wine
Islands continued their business as before the agreement;
and they pointed out that these prospering traders were
paying duties upon importations of molasses and wines and
thus counteracting the principle of home rule in taxation,
for which the Americans professed to be fighting. More-
over, the merchants of Maryland and Albany, acting under
more liberal agreements, were importing goods for the In-
dian trade, a privilege that was denied to the Philadelphia
merchants. 1 Their dissatisfaction with the agreement took
the form of efforts to modify it or repeal it rather than
clandestine attempts to violate it.
The Society of Friends, in which some of the great mer-
chants were very influential, found an early occasion to take
an official stand against it. At the time of the Stamp Act,
more than fifty of them, including such prominent Quakers
as Israel and James Pemberton, had signed the agreement;
and indeed the measure appeared to be a Quaker method of
resistance. But the present agreement was more rigorous
in its terms; and when the Charming Polly episode disclosed
that the populace, most of whom " were incapable of judg-
ing prudently on a matter of so great importance," might
against smuggled importations from Hamburg and Holland.
There
were no published accounts of efforts to enforce these latter restric-
tions. "A. B. " in the N. Y. Journ. , Nov. 23, 1760, made an incidental
reference to the storing of large consignments from foreign merchants.
1 Pa. Gas. , Jan. 25, 1770; Pa. Mag. , vol. xiv, p. 42.
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? I92 THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1776
be called in to exert force in executing the agreement, the
monthly meeting of Philadelphia advised Friends to have
nothing to do with non-importation measures. 1 Neverthe-
less, many prominent Quakers were concerned in the agree-
ment, including John Reynell who headed the committee
of inspection.
The Philadelphia merchants established an excellent rec-
ord of enforcement. On Monday, July 17, 1769, occurred
the first effort to violate the agreement, when the Charming
Polly with a cargo of malt arrived in port. Amos Strettell,
the consignee, was able to show that he had not ordered
the malt; and at a public meeting the following day the
brewers of the city presented an agreement that they would
have none of it. The meeting voted unanimously that any
person who bought any of the malt or helped to unload it
should be deemed an "Enemy to his Country. " A week
later, the captain of the brig, not perhaps lacking a sense of
humor, sailed with his malt to Cork. 2 On July 29, the brig
Speedwell arrived with some debarred goods, which had been
ordered prior to the agreement; these were placed in a
public store. 8
The expeditious return of imports commended itself as
a better device than the storing of them on either the New
York or the Boston plan. The Philadelphia Committee
believed it would defeat the scheme of " some monied peo-
ple" in England " to buy up quantities of manufactures on
easy terms and lodge them in the principal towns in America
to be ready for the first opening of the markets after the
repeal. " * Therefore, at a meeting of August 2, the mer-
1 Sharpless, I. , The Quakers in the Revolution (Philadelphia, 1899),
pp. 77-80; Lincoln, Revolutionary Movement in Pa. , p. 151.
1 Pa. Journ. , July 20, 1769; also N. Y. Ga*. & Merc. , July 24.
1Pa. Journ. , Aug. 3, 1769.
4 Papers of Phila. Merchants, pp. 29-31.
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? NON-IMPORTATION
chants decided that all goods, which arrived from England
on consignment or which had been ordered after February
6, should not be stored as other goods but should be sent
back. 1 This plan was followed thereafter. A notable case
of enforcement occurred when the Friend's Good Will ar-
rived on September 30 with a great quantity of merchandise
shipped by British merchants on speculation. These goods
were said to have been offered to eighty-four merchants in
vain; and the brig returned with her cargo intact. 2 In
December, the signers of the agreement authorized the com-
mittee to auction off such stored goods as were likely to
perish from prolonged storing, the profits of such sale to
be devoted to some public use. 8
The committee of inspection continued its activities far
into the year 1770 and did not find it necessary to proscribe
offenders by name until June of that year. 4 Statistics show
that British imports had been reduced in value from ? 441,-
829 in 1768 to ? 204,978 in the year 1769, and to ? 134,881
in 1770. 8 Next to New York, this was the best record of
any province for the year 1769, and the best record on the
continent for the year 1770. The enforcement of non-
importation was free from all exhibitions of mob violence,
1 Pa. Gas. , Aug. 3, 1769; also Pa. Journ. , Aug. 3.
* Pa. lourn. , Oct. 5, 1769; 5. C. Gas. , Nov. 16. The committee of
inspection also had to be watchful to detect fraudulent practices on
the part of British merchants. In one instance, Stephen Collins
solemnly informed the London merchant, Samuel Elam, "thy Brother
Emanuel was found' to have antedated his Invoices and Letters in
sutch a manner as to Lead people here [to] talke very freely of them. "
A few months later, he returned a bale of cloth sent by Samuel Elam
himself contrary to orders, with the admonition: "I am realy sorry
for thy sake it has happened, as many people seem mutch Disaffected. "
Collins, Letter Book 1760-1773, Sept. 18, Dec, 11, 1769.
1 Papers of Phila. Merchants, pp. 64-67.
? E. g. , vide Pa. Journ. , July 5, 12, 28, 1770.
1 Macpherson, Annals of Com. , vol. iii, pp. 485, 494-495, 508.
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? THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1776
largely because goods violative of the agreement were im-
mediately re-shipped to Great Britain.
Of the minor provinces in the commercial group, New
Hampshire took a belated stand on the side of non-importa-
tion when the emotions of the people were deeply stirred
by the news of the Boston Massacre. As late as February,
1770, Governor Wentworth had written that some Scotch
merchants were plying a trade in imported wares undis-
turbed. 1 After the fateful fifth of March, all indifference
vanished among the people. "The cry of Blood, reechoed
from one to the other, seems to infuriate them," wrote the
governor. "Upon this event the Assembly were prevailed
upon to forward their petition, which would otherwise have
slept forever; the people will not be persuaded but that the
Commissioners of the Customs and the Revenue Acts are
exerted to destroy the lives and absorb the property of the
people. " 2 The first action was taken by town meetings at
New Ipswich and Exeter, two towns located not far from
the Massachusetts line. New Ipswich was a sparsely settled
township with trading relations solely with Boston; and on
March 19, they resolved to purchase no articles forbidden
by the Boston agreement and to boycott all importers. 8
The inhabitants of Exeter, notwithstanding the reputation
they enjoyed of living up to " the tip top of the Fashion,""
agreed a week later to discourage the use of foreign luxuries
and to stop totally the consumption of tea until the duty
should be removed. 4 No action was taken by Portsmouth,
the chief port, until McMasters, a proscribed importer of
1 Vide supra, p. 155.
1Brit. Papers ("Sparks Mss. "), voL i, p. 17. Letter of Apr. 12, 1770
to Hillsborough.
1 Bos. Eve. Post, Apr. 9, 1770.
4 N. H. Gas. , Apr. 1. 3, May 11, 1770.
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? NON-IMPORTA TION
195
Boston, sought to introduce his wares there. The town
meeting, on April n, resolved to have no dealings with
McMasters or any other importer, and to boycott vendue
masters and coasting vessels that were in any way connected
with them. They even threatened to cancel the licenses of
tavern-keepers who permitted such goods to be exposed
for sale in their houses. 1 The movement in New Hamp-
shire partook too much of the nature of an emotional revival
to be lasting in its effects; and, as we shall see, the merchants
at Portsmouth resumed importation as soon as the excite-
ment subsided.
Of the remaining northern provinces, Rhode Island was
the only province whose conduct resembled, in any respect,
that of New Hampshire. Dragged into the non-importa-
tion league by threats of boycott by the great trading-towns,
the merchants at Newport regarded their tardy agreement
with keenest disrelish. Hutchinson voiced the common
opinion of other provinces when he said: "Rhode Island
professed to Join but privatelv imported to their great
ga1n. 2 When John Maudsley, a member of the Sons of
Liberty, returned from London with goods forbidden by
the agreement, which had been adopted during his absence,
he " cheerfully submitted" the goods to be stored, accord-
ing to the account in the Newport Mercury, April 9, 1770.
But if "Americanus," of Swanzey, is to be believed in the
Boston Gasette, May 7, the goods in question were placed
in Maudsley's store on the wharf, and, after dark, were
carted to his house, immediately opened and publicly sold
to almost every shop in Newport, unnoticed by the Mer-
chants' Committee. This tale bears the color of truth.
Certain it is that the Merchants' Committee at Newport
1 N. H. Gas. , Apr. 13, 1770; also Bos. Eve. Post, Apr. 16.
1Mass. Bay, voL iii, p. 261 n.
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? 196 THE COLONIAL MERCHANTS: 1763-1778
never displayed any noticeable activity in detecting tabooed
importations.
All evidence would indicate that New Jersey, the Dela-
ware Counties and Connecticut were true to their profes-
sions of non-importation and non-consumption. In the case
of Connecticut, "A Freeman of Connecticut " wrote in July,
1770, with every assurance of truth, that the various agree-
ments of the towns had been kept "save in three or four
trivial instances, inadvertently and inconsiderately done;
and in every instance, one excepted, public satisfaction has
been given and the goods stored. " 1 The exception was a
small importation of tea from Boston.
1 Conn. Courant, July 30, 1770. A case, which gained local notoriety,
was the importation of some coarse woolens by Mr. Verstille, of Weath-
ersfield, a man who had been in England when the non-importation
agreement was adopted As the merits of the case were not at all
clear, some merchants cut the knot by buying the goods from Verstille
and placing them in store at their expense. Ibid. , Mch. 5.
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? CHAPTER V
ENFORCEMENT AND BBEAKDOWN OF NON-IMPORTATION
(Continued)
plantation provinces, non-importation and the prob-
jems of its enforcement wel'tf llllllll leii. a bart ot the fabric
of everyday l1fe flp" m t^e mmrnercial provinces. The
agreements and associations had been promoted by the plant-
ing class in opposition to the small, active mercantile class;
and in the general absence of trading centres, it was difficult
for the planting element to implant the fear of discipline
in the hearts of the merchants. The geographical distribu-
tion of southern society deprived the planters of the oppor-
tunity of exerting their influence compactly, except at the
periodical meetings of the legislative assemblies. Further-
more, since the economic discontent in the South was not
directly traceable to the Townshend duties and restrictions,
a literal obedience to the agreements did not always seem
imperative to the planters themselves.
