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Book Four
Of Systems of Political Economy.
CHAPTER VII
Of Colonies
PART 2
Causes of Prosperity of New Colonies
THE colony of a civilised nation which takes possession
either of a waste country, or of one so thinly inhabited that the
natives easily give place to the new settlers, advances more
rapidly to wealth and greatness than any other human society.
The colonists carry out with them a knowledge of agriculture
and of other useful arts superior to what can grow up of its own
accord in the course of many centuries among savage and barbarous
nations. They carry out with them, too, the habit of
subordination, some notion of the regular government which takes
place in their own country, of the system of laws which support
it, and of a regular administration of justice; and they
naturally establish something of the same kind in the new
settlement. But among savage and barbarous nations, the natural
progress of law and government is still slower than the natural
progress of arts, after law and government have been go far
established as is necessary for their protection. Every colonist
gets more land than he can possibly cultivate. He has no rent,
and scarce any taxes to pay. No landlord shares with him in its
produce, and the share of the sovereign is commonly but a trifle.
He has every motive to render as great as possible a produce,
which is thus to be almost entirely his own. But his land is
commonly so extensive that, with all his own industry, and with
all the industry of other people whom he can get to employ, he
can seldom make it produce the tenth part of what it is capable
of producing. He is eager, therefore, to collect labourers from
all quarters, and to reward them with the most liberal wages. But
those liberal wages, joined to the plenty and cheapness of land,
soon make those labourers leave him, in order to become landlords
themselves, and to reward, with equal liberality, other
labourers, who soon leave them for the same reason that they left
their first master. The liberal reward of labour encourages
marriage. The children, during the tender years of infancy, are
well fed and properly taken care of, and when they are grown up,
the value of their labour greatly overpays their maintenance.
When arrived at maturity, the high price of labour, and the low
price of land, enable them to establish themselves in the same
manner as their fathers did before them.
In other countries, rent and profit eat up wages, and the
two superior orders of people oppress the inferior one. But in
new colonies the interest of the two superior orders obliges them
to treat the inferior one with more generosity and humanity; at
least where that inferior one is not in a state of slavery. Waste
lands of the greatest natural fertility are to be had for a
trifle. The increase of revenue which the proprietor, who is
always the undertaker, expects from their improvement,
constitutes his profit which in these circumstances is commonly
very great. But this great profit cannot be made without
employing the labour of other people in clearing and cultivating
the land; and the disproportion between the great extent of the
land and the small number of the people, which commonly takes
place in new colonies, makes it difficult for him to get this
labour. He does not, therefore, dispute about wages, but is
willing to employ labour at any price. The high wages of labour
encourage population. The cheapness and plenty of good land
encourage improvement, and enable the proprietor to pay those
high wages. In those wages consists almost the whole price of the
land; and though they are high considered as the wages of labour,
they are low considered as the price of what is so very valuable.
What encourages the progress of population and improvement
encourages that of real wealth and greatness.
The progress of many of the ancient Greek colonies towards
wealth and greatness seems accordingly to have been very rapid.
In the course of a century or two, several of them appear to have
rivalled, and even to have surpassed their mother cities.
Syracuse and Agrigentum in Sicily, Tarentum and Locri in Italy,
Ephesus and Miletus in Lesser Asia, appear by all accounts to
have been at least equal to any of the cities of ancient Greece.
Though posterior in their establishment, yet all the arts of
refinement, philosophy, poetry, and eloquence seem to have been
cultivated as early, and to have been improved as highly in them
as in any part of the mother country. The schools of the two
oldest Greek philosophers, those of Thales and Pythagoras, were
established, it is remarkable, not in ancient Greece, but the one
in an Asiatic, the other in an Italian colony. All those colonies
had established themselves in countries inhabited by savage and
barbarous nations, who easily gave place to the new settlers.
They had plenty of good land, and as they were altogether
independent of the mother city, they were at liberty to manage
their own affairs in the way that they judged was most suitable
to their own interest.
The history of the Roman colonies is by no means so
brilliant. Some of them, indeed, such as Florence, have in the
course of many ages, and after the fall of the mother city, grown
up to be considerable states. But the progress of no one of them
seems ever to have been very rapid. They were all established in
conquered provinces, which in most cases had been fully inhabited
before. The quantity of land assigned to each colonist was seldom
very considerable, and as the colony was not independent, they
were not always at liberty to manage their own affairs in the way
they judged was most suitable to their own interest.
In the plenty of good land, the European colonies
established in America and the West Indies resemble, and even
greatly surpass, those of ancient Greece. In their dependency
upon the mother state, they resemble those of ancient Rome; but
their great distance from Europe has in all of them alleviated
more or less the effects of this dependency. Their situation has
placed them less in the view and less in the power of their
mother country. In pursuing their interest their own way, their
conduct has, upon many occasions, been overlooked, either because
not known or not understood in Europe; and upon some occasions it
has been fairly suffered and submitted to, because their distance
rendered it difficult to restrain it. Even the violent and
arbitrary government of Spain has, upon many occasions, been
obliged to recall or soften the orders which had been given for
the government of her colonies for fear of a general
insurrection. The progress of all the European colonies in
wealth, population, and improvement, has accordingly been very
great.
The crown of Spain, by its share of the gold and silver,
derived some revenue from its colonies from the moment of their
first establishment. It was a revenue, too, of a nature to excite
in human avidity the most extravagant expectations of still
greater riches. The Spanish colonies, therefore, from the moment
of their first establishment, attracted very much the attention
of their mother country, while those of the other European
nations were for a long time in a great measure neglected. The
former did not, perhaps, thrive the better in consequence of this
attention; nor the latter the worse in consequence of this
neglect. In proportion to the extent of the country which they in
some measure possess, the Spanish colonies are considered as less
populous and thriving than those of almost any other European
nation. The progress even of the Spanish colonies, however, in
population and improvement, has certainly been very rapid and
very great. The city of Lima, founded since the conquest, is
represented by Ulloa as containing fifty thousand inhabitants
near thirty years ago. Quito, which had been but a miserable
hamlet of Indians, is represented by the same author as in his
time equally populous. Gemelli Carreri, a pretended traveller, it
is said, indeed, but who seems everywhere to have written upon
extremely good information, represents the city of Mexico as
containing a hundred thousand inhabitants; a number which, in
spite of all the exaggerations of the Spanish writers, is,
probably, more than five times greater than what it contained in
the time of Montezuma. These numbers exceed greatly those of
Boston, New York, and Philadelphia, the three greatest cities of
the English colonies. Before the conquest of the Spaniards there
were no cattle fit for draught either in Mexico or Peru. The
llama was their only beast of burden, and its strength seems to
have been a good deal inferior to that of a common ass. The
plough was unknown among them. They were ignorant of the use of
iron. They had no coined money, nor any established instrument of
commerce of any kind. Their commerce was carried on by barter. A
sort of wooden spade was their principal instrument of
agriculture. Sharp stones served them for knives and hatchets to
cut with; fish bones and the hard sinews of certain animals
served them for needles to sew with; and these seem to have been
their principal instruments of trade. In this state of things, it
seems impossible that either of those empires could have been so
much improved or so well cultivated as at present, when they are
plentifully furnished with all sorts of European cattle, and when
the use of iron, of the plough, and of many of the arts of
Europe, has been introduced among them. But the populousness of
every country must be in proportion to the degree of its
improvement and cultivation. In spite of the cruel destruction of
the natives which followed the conquest, these two great empires
are, probably, more populous now than they ever were before: and
the people are surely very different; for we must acknowledge, I
apprehend, that the Spanish creoles are in many respects superior
to the ancient Indians.
After the settlements of the Spaniards, that of the
Portuguese in Brazil is the oldest of any European nation in
America. But as for a long time after the first discovery neither
gold nor silver mines were found in it, and as it afforded, upon
that account, little or no revenue to the crown, it was for a
long time in a great measure neglected; and during this state of
neglect it grew up to be a great and powerful colony. While
Portugal was under the dominion of Spain, Brazil was attacked by
the Dutch, who got possession of seven of the fourteen provinces
into which it is divided. They expected soon to conquer the other
seven, when Portugal recovered its independency by the elevation
of the family of Braganza to the throne. The Dutch then, as
enemies to the Spaniards, became friends to the Portuguese, who
were likewise the enemies of the Spaniards. They agreed,
therefore, to leave that part of Brazil, which they had not
conquered, to the King of Portugal, who agreed to leave that part
which they had conquered to them, as a matter not worth disputing
about with such good allies. But the Dutch government soon began
to oppress the Portuguese colonists, who, instead of amusing
themselves with complaints, took arms against their new masters,
and by their own valour and resolution, with the connivance,
indeed, but without any avowed assistance from the mother
country, drove them out of Brazil. The Dutch, therefore, finding
it impossible to keep any part of the country to themselves, were
contented that it should be entirely restored to the crown of
Portugal. In this colony there are said to be more than six
hundred thousand people, either Portuguese or descended from
Portuguese, creoles, mulattoes, and a mixed race between
Portuguese and Brazilians. No one colony in America is supposed
to contain so great a number of people of European extraction.
Towards the end of the fifteenth, and during the greater
part of the sixteenth century, Spain and Portugal were the two
great naval powers upon the ocean; for though the commerce of
Venice extended to every part of Europe, its fleets had scarce
ever sailed beyond the Mediterranean. The Spaniards, in virtue of
the first discovery, claimed all America as their own; and though
they could not hinder so great a naval power as that of Portugal
from settling in Brazil, such was, at that time, the terror of
their name, that the greater part of the other nations of Europe
were afraid to establish themselves in any other part of that
great continent. The French, who attempted to settle in Florida,
were all murdered by the Spaniards. But the declension of the
naval power of this latter nation, in consequence of the defeat
or miscarriage of what they called their Invincible Armada, which
happened towards the end of the sixteenth century, put it out of
their power to obstruct any longer the settlements of the other
European nations. In the course of the seventeenth century,
therefore, the English, French, Dutch, Danes, and Swedes, all the
great nations who had any ports upon the ocean, attempted to make
some settlements in the new world.
The Swedes established themselves in New Jersey; and the
number of Swedish families still to be found there sufficiently
demonstrates that this colony was very likely to prosper had it
been protected by the mother country. But being neglected by
Sweden, it was soon swallowed up by the Dutch colony of New York,
which again, in 1674, fell under the dominion of the English.
The small islands of St. Thomas and Santa Cruz are the only
countries in the new world that have ever been possessed By the
Danes. These little settlements, too, were under the government
of an exclusive company, which had the sole right, both of
purchasing the surplus produce of the colonists, and of supplying
them with such goods of other countries as they wanted, and
which, therefore, both in its purchases and sales, had not only
the power of oppressing them, but the greatest temptation to do
so. The government of an exclusive company of merchants is,
perhaps, the worst of all governments for any country whatever.
It was not, however, able to stop altogether the progress of
these colonies, though it rendered it more slow and languid. The
late King of Denmark dissolved this company, and since that time
the prosperity of these colonies has been very great.
The Dutch settlements in the West, as well as those in the
East Indies, were originally put under the government of an
exclusive company. The progress of some of them, therefore,
though it has been considerable, in comparison with that of
almost any country that has been long peopled and established,
has been languid and slow in comparison with that of the greater
part of new colonies. The colony of Surinam, though very
considerable, is still inferior to the greater part of the sugar
colonies of the other European nations. The colony of Nova
Belgia, now divided into the two provinces of New York and New
Jersey, would probably have soon become considerable too, even
though it had remained under the government of the Dutch. The
plenty and cheapness of good land are such powerful causes of
prosperity that the very worst government is scarce capable of
checking altogether the efficacy of their operation. The great
distance, too, from the mother country would enable the colonists
to evade more or less, by smuggling, the monopoly which the
company enjoyed against them. At present the company allows all
Dutch ships to trade to Surinam upon paying two and a half per
cent upon the value of their cargo for a licence; and only
reserves to itself exclusively the direct trade from Africa to
America, which consists almost entirely in the slave trade. This
relaxation in the exclusive privileges of the company is probably
the principal cause of that degree of prosperity which that
colony at present enjoys. Curacoa and Eustatia, the two principal
islands belonging to the Dutch, are free ports open to the ships
of all nations; and this freedom, in the midst of better colonies
whose ports are open to those of one nation only, has been the
great cause of the prosperity of those two barren islands.
The French colony of Canada was, during the greater part of
the last century, and some part of the present, under the
government of an exclusive company. Under so unfavourable an
administration its progress was necessarily very slow in
comparison with that of other new colonies; but it became much
more rapid when this company was dissolved after the fall of what
is called the Mississippi scheme. When the English got possession
of this country, they found in it near double the number of
inhabitants which Father Charlevoix had assigned to it between
twenty and thirty years before. That Jesuit had travelled over
the whole country, and had no inclination to represent it as less
considerable than it really was.
The French colony of St. Domingo was established by pirates
and freebooters, who, for a long time, neither required the
protection, nor acknowledged the authority of France; and when
that race of banditti became so far citizens as to acknowledge
this authority, it was for a long time necessary to exercise it
with very great gentleness. During this period the population and
improvement of this colony increased very fast. Even the
oppression of the exclusive company, to which it was for some
time subjected, with all the other colonies of France, though it
no doubt retarded, had not been able to stop its progress
altogether. The course of its prosperity returned as soon as it
was relieved from that oppression. It is now the most important
of the sugar colonies of the West Indies, and its produce is said
to be greater than that of all the English sugar colonies put
together. The other sugar colonies of France are in general all
very thriving.
But there are no colonies of which the progress has been
more rapid than that of the English in North America.
Plenty of good land, and liberty to manage their own affairs
their own way, seem to be the two great causes of the prosperity
of all new colonies.
In the plenty of good land the English colonies of North
America, though no doubt very abundantly provided, are however
inferior to those of the Spaniards and Portuguese, and not
superior to some of those possessed by the French before the late
war. But the political institutions of the English colonies have
been more favourable to the improvement and cultivation of this
land than those of any of the other three nations.
First, the engrossing of uncultivated land, though it has by
no means been prevented altogether, has been more restrained in
the English colonies than in any other. The colony law which
imposes upon every proprietor the obligation of improving and
cultivating, within a limited time, a certain proportion of his
lands, and which in case of failure, declares those neglected
lands grantable to any other person, though it has not, perhaps,
been very strictly executed, has, however, had some effect.
Secondly, in Pennsylvania there is no right of
primogeniture, and lands, like movables, are divided equally
among all the children of the family. In three of the provinces
of New England the oldest has only a double share, as in the
Mosaical law. Though in those provinces, therefore, too great a
quantity of land should sometimes be engrossed by a particular
individual, it is likely, in the course of a generation or two,
to be sufficiently divided again. In the other English colonies,
indeed, the right of primogeniture takes place, as in the law of
England. But in all the English colonies the tenure of the lands,
which are all held by free socage, facilitates alienation, and
the grantee of any extensive tract of land generally finds it for
his interest to alienate, as fast as he can, the greater part of
it, reserving only a small quit-rent. In the Spanish and
Portuguese colonies, what is called the right of Majorazzo takes
place in the succession of all those great estates to which any
title of honour is annexed. Such estates go all to one person,
and are in effect entailed and unalienable. The French colonies,
indeed, are subject to the custom of Paris, which, in the
inheritance of land, is much more favourable to the younger
children than the law of England. But in the French colonies, if
any part of an estate, held by the noble tenure of chivalry and
homage, is alienated, it is, for a limited time, subject to the
right of redemption, either by the heir of the superior or by the
heir of the family; and all the largest estates of the country
are held by such noble tenures, which necessarily embarrass
alienation. But in a new colony a great uncultivated estate is
likely to be much more speedily divided by alienation than by
succession. The plenty and cheapness of good land, it has already
been observed, are the principal causes of the rapid prosperity
of new colonies. The engrossing of land, in effect, destroys this
plenty and cheapness. The engrossing of uncultivated land,
besides, is the greatest obstruction to its improvement. But the
labour that is employed in the improvement and cultivation of
land affords the greatest and most valuable produce to the
society. The produce of labour, in this case, pays not only its
own wages, and the profit of the stock which employs it, but the
rent of the land too upon which it is employed. The labour of the
English colonists, therefore, being more employed in the
improvement and cultivation of land, is likely to afford a
greater and more valuable produce than that of any of the other
three nations, which, by the engrossing of land, is more or less
diverted towards other employments.
Thirdly, the labour of the English colonists is not only
likely to afford a greater and more valuable produce, but, in
consequence of the moderation of their taxes, a greater
proportion of this produce belongs to themselves, which they may
store up and employ in putting into motion a still greater
quantity of labour. The English colonists have never yet
contributed anything towards the defence of the mother country,
or towards the support of its civil government. They themselves,
on the contrary, have hitherto been defended almost entirely at
the expense of the mother country. But the expense of fleets and
armies is out of all proportion greater than the necessary
expense of civil government. The expense of their own civil
government has always been very moderate. It has generally been
confined to what was necessary for paying competent salaries to
the governor, to the judges, and to some other officers of
police, and for maintaining a few of the most useful public
works. The expense of the civil establishment of Massachusetts
Bay, before the commencement of the present disturbances, used to
be but about L18,000 a year. That of New Hampshire and Rhode
Island, L3500 each. That of Connecticut, L4000. That of New York
and Pennsylvania, L4500 each. That of New Jersey, L1200. That of
Virginia and South Carolina, L8000 each. The civil establishments
of Nova Scotia and Georgia are partly supported by an annual
grant of Parliament. But Nova Scotia pays, besides, about L7000 a
year towards the public expenses of the colony; and Georgia about
L2500 a year. All the different civil establishments in North
America, in short, exclusive of those of Maryland and North
Carolina, of which no exact account has been got, did not, before
the commencement of the present disturbances, cost the
inhabitants above L64,700 a year; an ever-memorable example at
how small an expense three millions of people may not only be
governed, but well governed. The most important part of the
expense of government, indeed, that of defence and protection,
has constantly fallen upon the mother country. The ceremonial,
too, of the civil government in the colonies, upon the reception
of a new governor, upon the opening of a new assembly, etc.,
though sufficiently decent, is not accompanied with any expensive
pomp or parade. Their ecclesiastical government is conducted upon
a plan equally frugal. Tithes are unknown among them; and their
clergy, who are far from being numerous, are maintained either by
moderate stipends, or by the voluntary contributions of the
people. The power of Spain and Portugal, on the contrary, derives
some support from the taxes levied upon their colonies. France,
indeed, has never drawn any considerable revenue from its
colonies, the taxes which it levies upon them being generally
spent among them. But the colony government of all these three
nations is conducted upon a much more expensive ceremonial. The
sums spent upon the reception of a new viceroy of Peru, for
example, have frequently been enormous. Such ceremonials are not
only real taxes paid by the rich colonists upon those particular
occasions, but they serve to introduce among them the habit of
vanity and expense upon all other occasions. They are not only
very grievous occasional taxes, but they contribute to establish
perpetual taxes of the same kind still more grievous; the ruinous
taxes of private luxury and extravagance. In the colonies of all
those three nations too, the ecclesiastical government is
extremely oppressive. Tithes take place in all of them, and are
levied with the utmost rigour in those of Spain and Portugal. All
of them, besides, are oppressed with a numerous race of mendicant
friars, whose beggary being not only licensed but consecrated by
religion, is a most grievous tax upon the poor people, who are
most carefully taught that it is a duty to give, and a very great
sin to refuse them their charity. Over and above all this, the
clergy are, in all of them, the greatest engrossers of land.
Fourthly, in the disposal of their surplus produce, or of
what is over and above their own consumption, the English
colonies have been more favoured, and have been allowed a more
extensive market, than those of any other European nation. Every
European nation has endeavoured more or less to monopolise to
itself the commerce of its colonies, and, upon that account, has
prohibited the ships of foreign nations from trading to them, and
has prohibited them from importing European goods from any
foreign nation. But the manner in which this monopoly has been
exercised in different nations has been very different.
Some nations have given up the whole commerce of their
colonies to an exclusive company, of whom the colonists were
obliged to buy all such European goods as they wanted, and to
whom they were obliged to sell the whole of their own surplus
produce. It was the interest of the company, therefore, not only
to sell the former as dear, and to buy the latter as cheap as
possible, but to buy no more of the latter, even at this low
price than what they could dispose of for a very high price in
Europe. It was their interest, not only to degrade in all cases
the value of the surplus produce of the colony, but in many cases
to discourage and keep down the natural increase of its quantity.
Of all the expedients that can well be contrived to stunt the
natural growth of a new colony, that of an exclusive company is
undoubtedly the most effectual. This, however, has been the
policy of Holland, though their company, in the course of the
present century, has given up in many respects the exertion of
their exclusive privilege. This, too, was the policy of Denmark
till the reign of the late king. It has occasionally been the
policy of France, and of late, since 1755, after it had been
abandoned by all other nations on account of its absurdity, it
has become the policy of Portugal with regard at least to two of
the principal provinces of Brazil, Fernambuco and Marannon.
Other nations, without establishing an exclusive company,
have confined the whole commerce of their colonies to a
particular port of the mother country, from whence no ship was
allowed to sail, but either in a fleet and at a particular
season, or, if single, in consequence of a particular licence,
which in most cases was very well paid for. This policy opened,
indeed, the trade of the colonies to all the natives of the
mother country, provided they traded from the proper port, at the
proper season, and in the proper vessels. But as all the
different merchants, who joined their stocks in order to fit out
those licensed vessels, would find it for their interest to act
in concert, the trade which was carried on in this manner would
necessarily be conducted very nearly upon the same principles as
that of an exclusive company. The profit of those merchants would
be almost equally exorbitant and oppressive. The colonies would
be ill supplied, and would be obliged both to buy very dear, and
to sell very cheap. This, however, till within these few years,
had always been the policy of Spain, and the price of all
European goods, accordingly, is said to have been enormous in the
Spanish West Indies. At Quito, we are told by Ulloa, a pound of
iron sold for about four and sixpence, and a pound of steel for
about six and ninepence sterling. But it is chiefly in order to
purchase European goods that the colonies part with their own
produce. The more, therefore, they pay for the one, the less they
really get for the other, and the dearness of the one is the same
thing with the cheapness of the other. The policy of Portugal is
in this respect the same as the ancient policy of Spain with
regard to all its colonies, except Fernambuco and Marannon, and
with regard to these it has lately adopted a still worse.
Other nations leave the trade of their colonies free to all
their subjects who may carry it on from all the different ports
of the mother country, and who have occasion for no other licence
than the common despatches of the custom-house. In this case the
number and dispersed situation of the different traders renders
it impossible for them to enter into any general combination, and
their competition is sufficient to hinder them from making very
exorbitant profits. Under so liberal a policy the colonies are
enabled both to sell their own produce and to buy the goods of
Europe at a reasonable price. But since the dissolution of the
Plymouth Company, when our colonies were but in their infancy,
this has always been the policy of England. It has generally,
too, been that of France, and has been uniformly so since the
dissolution of what, in England, is commonly called their
Mississippi Company. The profits of the trade, therefore, which
France and England carry on with their colonies, though no doubt
somewhat higher than if the competition was free to all other
nations, are, however, by no means exorbitant; and the price of
European goods accordingly is not extravagantly high in the
greater part of the colonies of either of those nations.
In the exportation of their own surplus produce too, it is
only with regard to certain commodities that the colonies of
Great Britain are confined to the market of the mother country.
These commodities having been enumerated in the Act of Navigation
and in some other subsequent acts, have upon that account been
called enumerated commodities. The rest are called
non-enumerated, and may be exported directly to other countries
provided it is in British or Plantation ships, of which the
owners and three-fourths of the mariners are British subjects.
Among the non-enumerated commodities are some of the most
important productions of America and the West Indies; grain of
all sorts, lumber, salt provisions, fish, sugar and rum.
Grain is naturally the first and principal object of the
culture of all new colonies. By allowing them a very extensive
market for it, the law encourages them to extend this culture
much beyond the consumption of a thinly inhabited country, and
thus to provide beforehand an ample subsistence for a continually
increasing population.
In a country quite covered with wood, where timber
consequently is of little or no value, the expense of clearing
the ground is the principal obstacle to improvement. By allowing
the colonies a very extensive market for their lumber, the law
endeavours to facilitate improvement by raising the price of a
commodity which would otherwise be of little value, and thereby
enabling them to make some profit of what would otherwise be a
mere expense.
In a country neither half-peopled nor half-cultivated,
cattle naturally multiply beyond the consumption of the
inhabitants, and are often upon that account of little or no
value. But it is necessary, it has already been shown, that the
price of cattle should bear a certain proportion to that of corn
before the greater part of the lands of any country can be
improved. By allowing to American cattle, in all shapes, dead or
alive, a very extensive market, the law endeavors to raise the
value of a commodity of which the high price is so very essential
to improvement. The good effects of this liberty, however, must
be somewhat diminished by the 4th of George III, c. 15, which
puts hides and skins among the enumerated commodities, and
thereby tends to reduce the value of American cattle.
To increase the shipping and naval power of Great Britain,
by the extension of the fisheries of our colonies, is an object
which the legislature seems to have had almost constantly in
view. Those fisheries, upon this account, have had all the
encouragement which freedom can give them, and they have
flourished accordingly. The New England fishery in particular
was, before the late disturbances, one of the most important,
perhaps, in the world. The whale-fishery which, notwithstanding
an extravagant bounty, is in Great Britain carried on to so
little purpose that in the opinion of many people (which I do
not, however, pretend to warrant) the whole produce does not much
exceed the value of the bounties which are annually paid for it,
is in New England carried on without any bounty to a very great
extent. Fish is one of the principal articles with which the
North Americans trade to Spain, Portugal, and the Mediterranean.
Sugar was originally an enumerated commodity which could be
exported only to Great Britain. But in 1731, upon a
representation of the sugar-planters, its exportation was
permitted to all parts of the world. The restrictions, however,
with which this liberty was granted, joined to the high price of
sugar in Great Britain, have rendered it, in a great measure,
ineffectual. Great Britain and her colonies still continue to be
almost the sole market for all the sugar produced in the British
plantations. Their consumption increases so fast that, though in
consequence of the increasing improvement of Jamaica, as well as
of the Ceded Islands, the importation of sugar has increased very
greatly within these twenty years, the exportation to foreign
countries is said to be not much greater than before.
Rum is a very important article in the trade which the
Americans carry on to the coast of Africa, from which they bring
back negro slaves in return.
If the whole surplus produce of America in grain of all
sorts, in salt provisions and in fish, had been put into the
enumeration, and thereby forced into the market of Great Britain,
it would have interfered too much with the produce of the
industry of our own people. It was probably not so much from any
regard to the interest of America as from a jealousy of this
interference that those important commodities have not only been
kept out of the enumeration, but that the importation into Great
Britain of all grain, except rice, and of salt provisions, has,
in the ordinary state of the law, been prohibited.
The non-enumerated commodities could originally be exported
to all parts of the world. Lumber and rice, having been once put
into the enumeration, when they were afterwards taken out of it,
were confined, as to the European market, to the countries that
lie south of Cape Finisterre. By the 6th of George III, c. 52,
all non-enumerated commodities were subjected to the like
restriction. The parts of Europe which lie south of Cape
Finisterre are not manufacturing countries, and we were less
jealous of the colony ships carrying home from them any
manufactures which could interfere with our own.
The enumerated commodities are of two sorts: first, such as
are either the peculiar produce of America, or as cannot be
produced, or at least are not produced, in the mother country. Of
this kind are molasses, coffee, cocoa-nuts, tobacco, pimento,
ginger, whalefins, raw silk, cotton-wool, beaver, and other
peltry of America, indigo, fustic, and other dyeing woods;
secondly, such as are not the peculiar produce of America, but
which are and may be produced in the mother country, though not
in such quantities as to supply the greater part of her demand,
which is principally supplied from foreign countries. Of this
kind are all naval stores, masts, yards, and bowsprits, tar,
pitch, and turpentine, pig and bar iron, copper ore, hides and
skins, pot and pearl ashes. The largest importation of
commodities of the first kind could not discourage the growth or
interfere with the sale of any part of the produce of the mother
country. By confining them to the home market, our merchants, it
was expected, would not only be enabled to buy them cheaper in
the plantations, and consequently to sell them with a better
profit at home, but to establish between the plantations and
foreign countries an advantageous carrying trade, of which Great
Britain was necessarily to be the centre or emporium, as the
European country into which those commodities were first to be
imported. The importation of commodities of the second kind might
be so managed too, it was supposed, as to interfere, not with the
sale of those of the same kind which were produced at home, but
with that of those which were imported from foreign countries;
because, by means of proper duties, they might be rendered always
somewhat dearer than the former, and yet a good deal cheaper than
the latter. By confining such commodities to the home market,
therefore, it was proposed to discourage the produce, not of
Great Britain, but of some foreign countries with which the
balance of trade was believed to be unfavourable to Great
Britain.
The prohibition of exporting from the colonies, to any other
country but Great Britain, masts, yards, and bowsprits, tar,
pitch, and turpentine, naturally tended to lower the price of
timber in the colonies, and consequently to increase the expense
of clearing their lands, the principal obstacle to their
improvement. But about the beginning of the present century, in
1703, the pitch and tar company of Sweden endeavoured to raise
the price of their commodities to Great Britain, by prohibiting
their exportation, except in their own ships, at their own price,
and in such quantities as they thought proper. In order to
counteract this notable piece of mercantile policy, and to render
herself as much as possible independent, not only of Sweden, but
of all the other northern powers, Great Britain gave a bounty
upon the importation of naval stores from America, and the effect
of this bounty was to raise the price of timber in America much
more than the confinement to the home market could lower it; and
as both regulations were enacted at the same time, their joint
effect was rather to encourage than to discourage the clearing of
land in America.
Though pig and bar iron too have been put among the
enumerated commodities, yet as, when imported from America, they
were exempted from considerable duties to which they are subject
when imported from any other country, the one part of the
regulation contributes more to encourage the erection of furnaces
in America than the other to discourage it. There is no
manufacture which occasions so great a consumption of wood as a
furnace, or which can contribute so much to the clearing of a
country overgrown with it.
The tendency of some of these regulations to raise the value
of timber in America, and thereby to facilitate the clearing of
the land, was neither, perhaps, intended nor understood by the
legislature. Though their beneficial effects, however, have been
in this respect accidental, they have not upon that account been
less real.
The most perfect freedom of trade is permitted between the
British colonies of America and the West Indies, both in the
enumerated and in the non-enumerated commodities. Those colonies
are now become so populous and thriving that each of them finds
in some of the others a great and extensive market for every part
of its produce. All of them taken together, they make a great
internal market for the produce of one another.
The liberality of England, however, towards the trade of her
colonies has been confined chiefly to what concerns the market
for their produce, either in its rude state, or in what may be
called the very first stage of manufacture. The more advanced or
more refined manufactures even of the colony produce, the
merchants and manufacturers of Great Britain choose to reserve to
themselves, and have prevailed upon the legislature to prevent
their establishment in the colonies, sometimes by high duties,
and sometimes by absolute prohibitions.
While, for example, Muskovado sugars from the British
plantations pay upon importation only 6s. 4d. the hundredweight;
white sugars pay L1 1s. 1d.; and refined, either double or
single, in loaves L4 2s. 5 8/20d. When those high duties were
imposed, Great Britain was the sole, and she still continues to
be the principal market to which the sugars of the British
colonies could be exported. They amounted, therefore, to a
prohibition, at first of claying or refining sugar for any
foreign market, and at present of claying or refining it for the
market, which takes off, perhaps, more than nine-tenths of the
whole produce. The manufacture of claying or refining sugar
accordingly, though it has flourished in all the sugar colonies
of France, has been little cultivated in any of those of England
except for the market of the colonies themselves. While Grenada
was in the hands of the French there was a refinery of sugar, by
claying at least, upon almost every plantation. Since it fell
into those of the English, almost all works of this kind have
been given tip, and there are at present, October 1773, I am
assured not above two or three remaining in the island. At
present, however, by an indulgence of the custom-house, clayed or
refined sugar, if reduced from loaves into powder, is commonly
imported as Muskovado.
While Great Britain encourages in America the manufactures
of pig and bar iron, by exempting them from duties to which the
like commodities are subject when imported from any other
country, she imposes an absolute prohibition upon the erection of
steel furnaces and slitmills in any of her American plantations.
She will not suffer her colonists to work in those more refined
manufactures even for their own consumption; but insists upon
their purchasing of her merchants and manufacturers all goods of
this kind which they have occasion for.
She prohibits the exportation from one province to another
by water, and even the carriage by land upon horseback or in a
cart, of hats, of wools and woollen goods, of the produce of
America; a regulation which effectually prevents the
establishment of any manufacture of such commodities for distant
sale, and confines the industry of her colonists in this way to
such coarse and household manufactures as a private family
commonly makes for its own use or for that of some of its
neighbours in the same province.
To prohibit a great people, however, from making all that
they can of every part of their own produce, or from employing
their stock and industry in the way that they judge most
advantageous to themselves, is a manifest violation of the most
sacred rights of mankind. Unjust, however, as such prohibitions
may be, they have not hitherto been very hurtful to the colonies.
Land is still so cheap, and, consequently, labour so dear among
them, that they can import from the mother country almost all the
more refined or more advanced manufactures cheaper than they
could make for themselves. Though they had not, therefore, been
prohibited from establishing such manufactures, yet in their
present state of improvement a regard to their own interest
would, probably, have prevented them from doing so. In their
present state of improvement those prohibitions, perhaps, without
cramping their industry, or restraining it from any employment to
which it would have gone of its own accord, are only impertinent
badges of slavery imposed upon them, without any sufficient
reason, by the groundless jealousy of the merchants and
manufacturers of the mother country. In a more advanced state
they might be really oppressive and insupportable.
Great Britain too, as she confines to her own market some of
the most important productions of the colonies, so in
compensation she gives to some of them an advantage in that
market, sometimes by imposing higher duties upon the like
productions when imported from other countries, and sometimes by
giving bounties upon their importation from the colonies. In the
first way she gives an advantage in the home market to the sugar,
tobacco, and iron of her own colonies, and in the second to their
raw silk, to their hemp and flax, to their indigo, to their naval
stores, and to their building timber. This second way of
encouraging the colony produce by bounties upon importation, is,
so far as I have been able to learn, peculiar to Great Britain.
The first is not. Portugal does not content herself with imposing
higher duties upon the importation of tobacco from any other
country, but prohibits it under the severest penalties.
With regard to the importation of goods from Europe, England
has likewise dealt more liberally with her colonies than any
other nation.
Great Britain allows a part, almost always the half,
generally a larger portion, and sometimes the whole of the duty
which is paid upon the importation of foreign goods, to be drawn
back upon their exportation to any foreign country. No
independent foreign country, it was easy to foresee, would
receive them if they came to it loaded with the heavy duties to
which almost all foreign goods are subjected on their importation
into Great Britain. Unless, therefore, some part of those duties
was drawn back upon exportation, there was an end of the carrying
trade; a trade so much favoured by the mercantile system.
Our colonies, however, are by no means independent foreign
countries; and Great Britain having assumed to herself the
exclusive right of supplying them with all goods from Europe,
might have forced them (in the same manner as other countries
have done their colonies) to receive such goods, loaded with all
the same duties which they paid in the mother country. But, on
the contrary, till 1763, the same drawbacks were paid upon the
exportation of the greater part of foreign goods to our colonies
as to any independent foreign country. In 1763, indeed, by the
4th of George III, c. 15, this indulgence was a good deal abated,
and it was enacted, "That no part of the duty called the Old
Subsidy should be drawn back for any goods of the growth,
production, or manufacture of Europe or the East Indies, which
should be exported from this kingdom to any British colony or
plantation in America; wines, white calicoes and muslins
excepted." Before this law, many different sorts of foreign goods
might have been bought cheaper in the plantations than in the
mother country; and some may still.
Of the greater part of the regulations concerning the colony
trade, the merchants who carry it on, it must be observed, have
been the principal advisers. We must not wonder, therefore, if,
in the greater part of them, their interest has been more
considered than either that of the colonies or that of the mother
country. In their exclusive privilege of supplying the colonies
with all the goods which they wanted from Europe, and of
purchasing all such parts of their surplus produce as could not
interfere with any of the trades which they themselves carried on
at home, the interest of the colonies was sacrificed to the
interest of those merchants. In allowing the same drawbacks upon
the re-exportation of the greater part of European and East India
goods to the colonies as upon their re-exportation to any
independent country, the interest of the mother country was
sacrificed to it, even according to the mercantile ideas of that
interest. It was for the interest of the merchants to pay as
little as possible for the foreign which they sent to the
colonies, and, consequently, to get back as much as possible of
the duties which they advanced upon their importation into Great
Britain. They might thereby be enabled to sell in the colonies
either the same quantity of goods with a greater profit, or a
greater quantity with the same profit, and, consequently, to gain
something either in the one way or the other. It was likewise for
the interest of the colonies to get all such goods as cheap and
in as great abundance as possible. But this might not always be
for the interest of the mother country. She might frequently
suffer both in her revenue, by giving back a great part of the
duties which had been paid upon the importation of such goods;
and in her manufactures, by being undersold in the colony market,
in consequence of the easy terms upon which foreign manufactures
could be carried thither by means of those drawbacks. The
progress of the linen manufacture of Great Britain, it is
commonly said, has been a good deal retarded by the drawbacks
upon the re-exportation of German linen to the American colonies.
But though the policy of Great Britain with regard to the
trade of her colonies has been dictated by the same mercantile
spirit as that of other nations, it has, however, upon the whole,
been less illiberal and oppressive than that of any of them.
In everything, except their foreign trade, the liberty of
the English colonists to manage their own affairs their own way
is complete. It is in every respect equal to that of their
fellow-citizens at home, and is secured in the same manner, by an
assembly of the representatives of the people, who claim the sole
right of imposing taxes for the support of the colony government.
The authority of this assembly overawes the executive power, and
neither the meanest nor the most obnoxious colonist, as long as
he obeys the law, has anything to fear from the resentment,
either of the governor or of any other civil or military officer
in the province. The colony assemblies though, like the House of
Commons in England, are not always a very equal representation of
the people, yet they approach more nearly to that character; and
as the executive power either has not the means to corrupt them,
or, on account of the support which it receives from the mother
country, is not under the necessity of doing so, they are perhaps
in general more influenced by the inclinations of their
constituents. The councils which, in the colony legislatures,
correspond to the House of Lords in Great Britain, are not
composed of an hereditary nobility. In some of the colonies, as
in three of the governments of New England, those councils are
not appointed by the king, but chosen by the representatives of
the people. In none of the English colonies is there any
hereditary nobility. In all of them, indeed, as in all other free
countries, the descendant of an old colony family is more
respected than an upstart of equal merit and fortune; but he is
only more respected, and he has no privileges by which he can be
troublesome to his neighbours. Before the commencement of the
present disturbances, the colony assemblies had not only the
legislative but a part of the executive power. In Connecticut and
Rhode Island, they elected the governor. In the other colonies
they appointed the revenue officers who collected the taxes
imposed by those respective assemblies, to whom those officers
were immediately responsible. There is more equality, therefore,
among the English colonists than among the inhabitants of the
mother country. Their manners are more republican, and their
governments, those of three of the provinces of New England in
particular, have hitherto been more republican too.
The absolute governments of Spain, Portugal, and France, on
the contrary, take place in their colonies; and the discretionary
powers which such governments commonly delegate to all their
inferior officers are, on account of the great distance,
naturally exercised there with more than ordinary violence. Under
all absolute governments there is more liberty in the capital
than in any other part of the country. The sovereign himself can
never have either interest or inclination to pervert the order of
justice, or to oppress the great body of the people. In the
capital his presence overawes more or less all his inferior
officers, who in the remoter provinces, from whence the
complaints of the people are less likely to reach him, can
exercise their tyranny with much more safety. But the European
colonies in America are more remote than the most distant
provinces of the greatest empires which had ever been known
before. The government of the English colonies is perhaps the
only one which, since the world began, could give perfect
security to the inhabitants of so very distant a province. The
administration of the French colonies, however, has always been
conducted with more gentleness and moderation than that of the
Spanish and Portugese. This superiority of conduct is suitable
both to the character of the French nation, and to what forms the
character of every nation, the nature of their government, which
though arbitrary and violent in comparison with that of Great
Britain, is legal and free in comparison with those of Spain and
Portugal.
It is in the progress of the North American colonies,
however, that the superiority of the English policy chiefly
appears. The progress of the sugar colonies of France has been at
least equal, perhaps superior, to that of the greater part of
those of England, and yet the sugar colonies of England enjoy a
free government nearly of the same kind with that which takes
place in her colonies of North America. But the sugar colonies of
France are not discouraged, like those of England, from refining
their own sugar; and, what is of still greater importance, the
genius of their government naturally introduces a better
management of their negro slaves.
In all European colonies the culture of the sugar-cane is
carried on by negro slaves. The constitution of those who have
been born in the temperate climate of Europe could not, it is
supposed, support the labour of digging the ground under the
burning sun of the West Indies; and the culture of the sugarcane,
as it is managed at present, is all hand labour, though, in the
opinion of many, the drill plough might be introduced into it
with great advantage. But, as the profit and success of the
cultivation which is carried on by means of cattle, depend very
much upon the good management of those cattle, so the profit and
success of that which is carried on by slaves must depend equally
upon the good management of those slaves; and in the good
management of their slaves the French planters, I think it is
generally allowed, are superior to the English. The law, so far
as it gives some weak protection to the slave against the
violence of his master, is likely to be better executed in a
colony where the government is in a great measure arbitrary than
in one where it is altogether free. In every country where the
unfortunate law of slavery is established, the magistrate, when
he protects the slave, intermeddles in some measure in the
management of the private property of the master; and, in a free
country, where the master is perhaps either a member of the
colony assembly, or an elector of such a member, he dare not do
this but with the greatest caution and circumspection. The
respect which he is obliged to pay to the master renders it more
difficult for him to protect the slave. But in a country where
the government is in a great measure arbitrary, where it is usual
for the magistrate to intermeddle even in the management of the
private property of individuals, and to send them, perhaps, a
lettre de cachet if they do not manage it according to his
liking, it is much easier for him to give some protection to the
slave; and common humanity naturally disposes him to do so. The
protection of the magistrate renders the slave less contemptible
in the eyes of his master, who is thereby induced to consider him
with more regard, and to treat him with more gentleness. Gentle
usage renders the slave not only more faithful, but more
intelligent, and therefore, upon a double account, more useful.
He approaches more to the condition of a free servant, and may
possess some degree of integrity and attachment to his master's
interest, virtues which frequently belong to free servants, but
which never can belong to a slave who is treated as slaves
commonly are in countries where the master is perfectly free and
secure.
That the condition of a slave is better under an arbitrary
than under a free government is, I believe, supported by the
history of all ages and nations. In the Roman history, the first
time we read of the magistrate interposing to protect the slave
from the violence of his master is under the emperors. When
Vedius Pollio, in the presence of Augustus, ordered one of his
slaves, who had committed a slight fault, to be cut into pieces
and thrown into his fish pond in order to feed his fishes, the
emperor commanded him, with indignation, to emancipate
immediately, not only that slave, but all the others that
belonged to him. Under the republic no magistrate could have had
authority enough to protect the slave, much less to punish the
master.
The stock, it is to be observed, which has improved the
sugar colonies of France, particularly the great colony of St.
Domingo, has been raised almost entirely from the gradual
improvement and cultivation of those colonies. It has been almost
altogether the produce of the soil and of the industry of the
colonies, or, what comes to the same thing, the price of that
produce gradually accumulated by good management, and employed in
raising a still greater produce. But the stock which has improved
and cultivated the sugar colonies of England has, a great part of
it, been sent out from England, and has by no means been
altogether the produce of the soil and industry of the colonists.
The prosperity of the English sugar colonies has been, in a great
measure, owing to the great riches of England, of which a part
has overflowed, if one may say so, upon those colonies. But the
prosperity of the sugar colonies of France has been entirely
owing to the good conduct of the colonists, which must therefore
have had some superiority over that of the English; and this
superiority has been remarked in nothing so much as in the good
management of their slaves.
Such have been the general outlines of the policy of the
different European nations with regard to their colonies.
The policy of Europe, therefore, has very little to boast
of, either in the original establishment or, so far as concerns
their internal government, in the subsequent prosperity of the
colonies of America.
Folly and injustice seem to have been the principles which
presided over and directed the first project of establishing
those colonies; the folly of hunting after gold and silver mines,
and the injustice of coveting the possession of a country whose
harmless natives, far from having ever injured the people of
Europe, had received the first adventurers with every mark of
kindness and hospitality.
The adventurers, indeed, who formed some of the later
establishments, joined to the chimerical project of finding gold
and silver mines other motives more reasonable and more laudable;
but even these motives do very little honour to the policy of
Europe.
The English Puritans, restrained at home, fled for freedom
to America, and established there the four governments of New
England. The English Catholics, treated with much greater
injustice, established that of Maryland; the Quakers, that of
Pennsylvania. The Portuguese Jews, persecuted by the Inquisition,
stripped of their fortunes, and banished to Brazil, introduced by
their example some sort of order and industry among the
transported felons and strumpets by whom that colony was
originally peopled, and taught them the culture of the
sugar-cane. Upon all these different occasions it was not the
wisdom and policy, but the disorder and injustice of the European
governments which peopled and cultivated America.
In effectuating some of the most important of these
establishments, the different governments of Europe had as little
merit as in projecting them. The conquest of Mexico was the
project, not of the council of Spain, but of a governor of Cuba;
and it was effectuated by the spirit of the bold adventurer to
whom it was entrusted, in spite of everything which that
governor, who soon repented of having trusted such a person,
could do to thwart it. The conquerors of Chili and Peru, and of
almost all the other Spanish settlements upon the continent of
America, carried out with them no other public encouragement, but
a general permission to make settlements and conquests in the
name of the king of Spain. Those adventures were all at the
private risk and expense of the adventurers. The government of
Spain contributed scarce anything to any of them. That of England
contributed as little towards effectuating the establishment of
some of its most important colonies in North America.
When those establishments were effectuated, and had become
so considerable as to attract the attention of the mother
country, the first regulations which she made with regard to them
had always in view to secure to herself the monopoly of their
commerce; to confine their market, and to enlarge her own at
their expense, and, consequently, rather to damp and discourage
than to quicken and forward the course of their prosperity. In
the different ways in which this monopoly has been exercised
consists one of the most essential differences in the policy of
the different European nations with regard to their colonies. The
best of them all, that of England, is only somewhat less
illiberal and oppressive than that of any of the rest.
In what way, therefore, has the policy of Europe contributed
either to the first establishment, or to the present grandeur of
the colonies of America? In one way, and in one way only, it has
contributed a good deal. Magna virum Mater! It bred and formed
the men who were capable of achieving such great actions, and of
laying the foundation of so great an empire; and there is no
other quarter of the world of which the policy is capable of
forming, or has ever actually and in fact formed such men. The
colonies owe to the policy of Europe the education and great
views of their active and enterprising founders; and some of the
greatest and most important of them, so far as concerns their
internal government, owe to it scarce anything else.
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