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To John Adams from Stephen Higginson, July 1786

From Stephen Higginson

Boston July 1786.—

Sir.

Your obliging Letter of 18 Feby. I duly received. to me it is extraordinary, that having a common Interest in a commercial View, and a Rival in France equally dangerous to both, no Arrangements can be made between us and the British for our mutual safety and advantage. it is not uncommon for Individuals to sacrifice their Interest to gratify their resentment; but it does not often happen that States, especially such as have had long experience in the School of politics, are so much led away by resentful feelings. it must surely be much against their national Interest and Character, for the British to suffer the most important national Advantages to be transferred from themselves to the French, when possessed of the means of preventing it with the greatest Ease.— It is very unfortunate for this State, that the narrow policy of Britain so much affects our two Fisheries, which are our principal support. take these Staples from us, and the Commerce of Massachusetts will sink to almost nothing. there is no State in the Union which suffers in any degree equal to this from the restrictions of Britain; these sufferings may however eventually produce great Good, by checking habits of luxury and dissipation, and teaching us the necessity of cultivating those of an opposite nature— we shall learn by experience that to be independent and happy, we must be industrious and frugal.— The Act for regulating the Trade of foreigners in our ports, which passed the last year, was adopted with great Coolness, and met with much Opposition from Country Gentlemen. And finding that the States have not generally adopted similar restrictions, and that Rhode-Island and Hampshire have repealed their Acts of Navigation, our Court have this Session suspended ours. I have ever approved of the general principle of that Act, and wished that the Object of it might be attained; but convinced that many of the States would not be disposed to make a general restraining System, and persuaded that partial restrictions could not produce the desired effect upon the Conduct of Britain, I at first doubted the propriety of the measure. But as no great Evil can result from its continuance till the Fall, to prevent the appearance of versatility, to keep up by our example the attention of the States to the Subject, and to enjoy the credit of having taken the Lead, in case the commercial Convention which is to be held in September should recommend its being made a general System, I should not have gone so far as to suspend it.—1

The ostensible Object of that Convention is the regulation of Commerce; but when I consider the Men who are deputed from New-York, Pennsylvania and Virginia, and the source from whence the proposition was made, I am strongly inclined to think political Objects are intended to be combined with commercial, if they do not principally engross their Attention. there will be from New-York Mr: Duane, Mr: Hamilton, Mr: Chancellor Livingston— from Pennsylvania Mr: Robert Morris, Mr: Fitzsimmons, Mr: George Clymer— from Virginia Mr: Randolph, Mr: Maddison, Judge Jones, and several others from those States of like political principles and characters. the Measure appears to have originated in Virginia and with Mr: Maddison. The Men I have mentioned are all of them esteemed great Aristocrats, and their Constituents know that such is their Character— few of them have been in the commercial line, nor is it probable they know or care much about commercial Objects.—2

As this State from the nature and variety of its Trade, is more likely to be affected by general commercial Arrangements, than any other of the States, some persons have been appointed to represent it in the proposed Convention; they are Mr: Lowell, Mr: Dana, Mr: Gerry, Mr: Theo: Parsons, Mr: George Cabot, Mr: Sullivan and myself. If it be practicable to effect a general regulation of Trade, and to harmonize the apparently variant Interests of the States, it will probably be done by the Convention— I shall be very happy to have it effected, as we may then make an impression upon the British favorable to our Views: but this I rather hope than expect.— If the British are not blind to their own Interests, or unduly wedded to their own opinions, they will seriously view the Arrangements of France to supply us with their Manufactures and receive our Oil and Ashes in return— the Object of the proposed Convention, and the dispostion in the States from which it results, ought also to engage their Attention.—

Mr: Barrett has returned from France with a Contract for Oil, which can not be complied with. the terms might do should the price of Oil remain here as at present; but that can not probably be the case.—3 the British by reducing the duty in their ports, might immediately produce a great increase of the price here; and principles of policy would lead them perhaps to do it, as they wish no doubt to prevent such a Connection between us and France. But the present price can not long remain, as it is insufficient to support the Fishery for any length of time, unless we should have more than common success in getting Oil. It must from some cause or other, be rendered more valuable to those who take it, or the quantity taken will diminish in a few years to nothing.— If the French are really desirous of such an intercourse, they must leave the Business free from the Embarrassments of such Contracts. it is now our Interest to carry our Oil to their ports, even though we must receive their Exports in return; and while that is the case, we shall certainly repair thither for a Market—but if any new Event turns up, that shall open a better Market, we shall cease to supply them with Oil. few Men can be found so adventurous, as to enter into a Contract like that Mr: Barrett has brought Over, there are too many Contingencies which may render it ruinous to whoever may engage in it; and should any be so hardy as to do it, the French could not in the case I before-mentioned depend on a permanent Supply. Those who contracted with them might persist in their Endeavours to comply with their Contract to their own ruin, but the supply must inevitably fail, or greater encouragement be given. I wish the French may open their ports to receive our Oil, on terms at least as good as those stated in Mr: Barrett’s Contract; it would have a happy effect on our Whale-Fishery. this is however not to be expected, the influence of their own Company at St: John de. Luz will probably be against it,4 beside the opposition it may meet with from other Quarters.—

Our Cod-Fishery has not been so successful this year as the last, the first Fares were very small in general; and as the Fish then caught is much more valuable than that taken at other Seasons, it will materially affect the years Work.

As the British are extremely vigilant to discover any improprieties in our Conduct, and when they find any, are industrious in heightening them by colourings of their own; I now inclose you the original papers of a Case in which their Officers in Dominica have acted a part so mean and base, so repugnant to every Idea of liberality or Justice, as I think will much exceed any thing that has happened in this Country.5 the papers are genuine and official, their authenticity can not be denied; and there is nothing in the Capt’s: or Mate’s depositions, taken since their return, that much militates with the official papers. these papers may be of some use to you, they will at least shew as great an eagerness to injure on their parts, as we have ever discovered. should there be any complaint of the Seizure of a Vessel in Martha’s Vineyard belonging to Stanton Hazard, I can say that it was for a real breach of our Acts of Trade; though it would have savoured of ill nature, had it not been done by the Owners of this same Schr: Edgar-Town from resentment, and by way of Retaliation.6 Capt: Hazard had put on board his Vessel at New-London a parcel of Rum, and a quantity of Sperm-Oil purchased at Newport, which was going to Nova-Scotia for the purpose of saving the Duty, and receiving the Bounty in England. the Capt: at the Vineyard purchased a Whale-Boat to carry with him to Nova-Scotia, that he might appear like a Whale-Man, and he sold some Rum to pay for her. by our Acts he forfeited his Vessel and Cargo for selling Goods without entering, and by taking our Manufactures on board a British Vessel. having had the adjustment of this matter for one of the Owners of the Oil, we came to the knowledge of the facts.—

Large quantities of Oil have been purchased here and sent to Nova-Scotia, there shipped for England, and the Duty and Bounty both saved to the Shippers. vast quantities of Lumber &c. have also been bought in the eastern parts of this State, and shipped to the West-Indies as the produce of Nova-Scotia. it is in this way that Mr: Brook Watson7 and others have imposed upon the British Ministry; and this is one of the Evils that resulted from our Navigation Act. the force of our Government is not sufficient, to prevent our people from supplying the British, just at the Boundaries between us and them. they take the Lumber from Massachusetts, and lade it in Nova-Scotia; it is of course cleared from thence, and has the appearance of being the produce of that province. this kind of Trade has much increased, since the Navigation Act excluded the British from our ports— our eastern people say they must do it or starve, and defy our Government to prevent them. while this and other ports were open to them, and the British were allowed to take our exports from hence, they preferred generally taking their Cargo’s here, for they could buy cheaper and make payment easier; and it was not then so easy for them to pass off our Lumber &c. in the W: I: as the produce of Nova-Scotia, nor could the Ministry in that case have been so easily deceived.—

By the accounts which our Fishermen give, the French have very much increased their Cod-Fishery this year— those of ours who have Fished on the Banks of Newfoundland say, they never saw so many French Vessels on the Banks, not even before the War.—

There is a late regulation of the French, which requires, that such of our Vessels as are intended for their Islands, shall take Certificates from their Consuls or Agents here.8 the reason assigned is, to ascertain the Flag, and prevent their Subjects in the Islands from injury, by making advances to those who may assume the American Flag for the purpose of gaining a Credit. this does not appear to me to be even a good ostenible reason. I have no Idea that our reputation for solidity or punctuality is better than that of the British, I should be much gratified if I could believe it to be equal to that of any Europeans, even with our good Allies. but it is not the course or custom of the Island Business, for advances to be made by the French either to us or the British; it is much more frequent that we leave property behind in their Islands; there are but very few instances in which advances have been asked for by us, and still fewer in which they have been made.— their Object may be to prevent the British under the American-Flag, supplying their Islands in any degree with Fish; or it may be to strengthen the Idea of their partiality to and fondness for us, in permitting us to carry our Fish &c. to their Islands; and perhaps the measure may be adapted to effect both these purposes.—

I like very well your Idea of promoting a more general intercourse between us and the French in the commercial way, there are many Articles we may draw from them with advantage, and they might beneficially receive some of our Exports, were they once accustomed to the use of them— such an intercourse, or the appearance of its taking place might also stimulate the British to act with more liberality toward us.— But I have seen such striking proofs of the superiority of the French in political Arrangements— we have such strong Evidence of their desire to create a weighty influence in this Country, by conferring or appearing to confer particular Obligations upon us as a people, and by exciting in us a sense of gratitude for their favours and patronage, and fixing in us habits of obedience and implicit reliance upon their friendly intentions respecting us, that I confess myself inclined to examine critically the design and tendency of all their measures.—

It is in my mind safest to be quite independent of all the Nations in Europe. we must make the most we can of them all, and when opportunity offers play one off against another. the present seems to be a good opening to do this in the way you suggest— perhaps the surest way of bringing the British to terms is, to appear fond of an intimate connexion with France, and determined to increase our Commerce with her.— but with their knowledge and address, the Effect may become much more extensive, and perhaps of a different nature from that we intended. The sanguine warmth, and the incaution which ever attends the inexperience of youth, may throw us into the Arms of France before we are aware of it. the regulation above alluded to may be a part of their System, calculated to prepare our minds for distant measures and Events, and adapted to create in us a strong sense of obligation, if not of our dependence upon them.—

In our Treaty of Alliance made with them in 1778, they purposely introduced an Article, which was intended not to have any operation, or to appear of any importance, till the time of adjusting the terms when peace should arrive— it was constructed to give them the right of determining, whether our Independence should by the Treaty of Peace be explicitly acknowledged, or be only implicitly admitted and guarantied by themselves.9 you and Mr: Jay best know, how they were deprived of the advantage they expected to derive from that article.— when therefore we attempt to practice a political finesse with a Nation, so very extensive in their Views, and so subtile in their measures as the French, it must be done with the greatest caution. having a full knowledge of the Subject, and entering into their most distant intentions, you can assume an appearance of intimate friendship without danger. few men however for want of information and knowledge of the World can do this, still less the body of a people like ours. much time, and many favorable circumstances are necessary to make impressions on the public mind, and when effected, it is not easy to erase them. we have now, as a people, strong prepossessions in favour of the French, and against the British. every little circumstance is made the most of, to increase our fondness for and dependence upon the one, and to rouse our resentment against the other. political Considerations may make these kind of prejudices useful to a certain degree, but there is in my mind danger of their being carried too far. from an undue attachment to, and reliance upon the one, we may be in danger of future political Embarrassments; or by indulging too far our resentment against the other Nation, we may precipitate ourselves into a War. the nature of our individual Governments effectually prevent our practising any refinements in politics; and the fœderal one has not yet acquired any Energy, it has scarcely the form or appearance of a Government.—

Our general Court have this Session passed an Act granting to Congress the supplementary Aid, required by the System of March 1783.— the Impost was before granted,—but as the latter is expected to yield enough to pay the Interest on the foreign Debt, the former is to be paid only in facilities, or Certificates of Interest due to the Holders. this is short of the recommendation of Congress, and it is making in effect a difference between the foreign and domestic Creditor; the former will receive the full Sum due in Specie, the latter will have nothing but paper which will much depreciate. as there is in reason no distinction between them, the necessity of the case alone is urged in support of the difference made; they tell you that they are disposed, but have not Ability to pay both according to Contract.— But even this can not be obtained from all the States, and I very much doubt whether the System of March ever becomes an operative one. it is not the desire of all the States to have any System adopted, that shall take from them any portion of their property; nor is it in my mind probable, they will permit such an one to operate, till such Events shall overtake them, as may probably, prevent its answering the intended purpose, that of increasing the dignity and Energy of the fœderal Government, and establishing the public Credit.—

The habits of indolence and dissipation contracted during the War, are very much against our making a right improvement of the advantages we have in possession. the people at large have for several years lived in a manner much more expensive and luxurious, than they have Ability to support, and their Ideas can not now be brought to comport, with their real situation and means of living. hence, there is nothing they now so much dread, as the parting with any portion of that property, the whole of which they feel to be incompetent to satisfy their Desires. this is an Evil it is true, which will work its own Cure; and was there force in our Government to compel the payment of Taxes, the Cure might be accelerated.— but in our situation, without Energy and without any Funds beside what may be drawn from the people by Taxes, it is a serious and important Question, whether our Government may not get unhinged, and a revolution take place, before the Cure be effected, and the people at large discover, that to secure their liberties and the great bulk of their property, a certain portion of the latter must be parted with. we appear to be verging fast to a Crisis— a change of Ideas and measures must soon happen, either from conviction or from necessity; when it does take place, I hope it will be for the better; it will then behove every man of property and influence to aim at giving the Tide a right direction.—

From the complexion of your last Letters, we have no great prospect of obtaining any relief from Britain, nor any security against the Barbary Corsairs. reports have often appeared in the papers; that buoyed up the hopes of those who have no better sources of information. should any thing new turn up, I will thank you to give me such information as you may think proper.—

With due respect I have the honour to be your / Excellency’s / very hume: Servant.—

Stephen Higginson

RC (Adams Papers description begins Manuscripts and other materials, 1639–1889, in the Adams Manuscript Trust collection given to the Massachusetts Historical Society in 1956 and enlarged by a few additions of family papers since then. Citations in the present edition are simply by date of the original document if the original is in the main chronological series of the Papers and therefore readily found in the microfilm edition of the Adams Papers (APM). description ends ); endorsed by WSS: “Boston July—1786 / Mr. Stephen Higgenson”; notation by JA: “Suspension of The Massachusetts Na / vigation Act. / Commercial Convention to meet in / September. Political Objects to be com / bined with Commercial / Names of Members chosen from Virginia / Pennsilvania, New York and Massachu / setts. Madison, Morris, Hamilton, Dana &c.”

1Compare Higginson’s comments here on the suspension of the Massachusetts navigation act with Tristram Dalton’s in his letter of 11 July, above.

2Higginson’s concerns over the delegates to the Annapolis Convention and the consequences of their deliberations for merchants proved unfounded because only five states were represented by twelve delegates, and they did not include Massachusetts or the delegates, including Higginson, listed in the next paragraph. New York was represented by Alexander Hamilton and Egbert Benson; New Jersey by Abraham Clark, William C. Houston, and James Schureman; Pennsylvania by Tench Coxe; Delaware by Richard Basset, John Dickinson, and George Read; and Virginia by James Madison, Edmund Randolph, and St. George Tucker (Louis Ottenberg, “A Fortunate Fiasco: The Annapolis Convention of 1786,” American Bar Association Journal [1959], p. 837). For the Annapolis Convention, see also Charles Storer’s 7 April letter, and note 2, above.

3Higginson’s comments on Nathaniel Barrett’s contract to sell American whale oil to France provide an excellent example of the difficulty of facilitating Franco-American trade and apply with equal force to Robert Morris’ tobacco contract, for which see the Marquis de Lafayette’s 16 June letter, and note 2, above. So long as France insisted on creating import monopolies, most significantly under the aegis of the Farmers General, and using contracts to set commodity prices without regard to the item’s actual market price, American merchants and producers would face precisely the difficulties that Higginson describes.

4St. Jean de Luz, France, on the Franco-Spanish border, had long been involved in the Basque fisheries. Now that France was seeking to expand its whale fishery, the town’s whalers would have opposed the importation of cheap American oil.

5The enclosures have not been found, and nothing further is known about the case.

6James Bowdoin mentioned this vessel in his 11 July letter, above, as a possible reason for the seizure of American ships by New Brunswick authorities, but nothing more is known of the incident than what Higginson writes here.

7Brook Watson (1736–1807), who spent a portion of his youth in Boston, had long been heavily involved in British trade with Canada, particularly Quebec and Nova Scotia. In 1782 and 1783, as Guy Carleton’s commissary general at New York, he was largely responsible for the evacuation of the loyalists to Nova Scotia. In 1784 he was elected to Parliament for London and in 1786 was named the London agent for New Brunswick. Watson is perhaps best known for the loss of a leg at age fourteen while swimming in the harbor at Havana, Cuba, which he commemorated in 1778 by commissioning John Singleton Copley to paint “Watson and the Shark” (Dictionary of Canadian Biography, 15 vols. to date, Toronto, 1966–  , vol. 5). For Watson’s comments on the Newfoundland Trade Bill as an M.P. in 1785, see vol. 17:545, 546, 547, 548, and Ritcheson, Aftermath of Revolution description begins Charles R. Ritcheson, Aftermath of Revolution: British Policy toward the United States, 1783–1795, Dallas, 1969. description ends , p. 192–193.

8Presumably Higginson refers to the “Arrêt du Conseil D’État du Roi, Concernant le Commerce étranger dans les Isles Françoises de L’Amerique. Du 30 Août 1784,” and specifically to Art. 12, which provided that papers for foreign ships could be given only at foreign ports where France had consuls, vice consuls, or agents (PCC, No. 80, II, f. 237–248). For JA’s comments regarding the arrêt, see vol. 16:551–553.

9Higginson refers to Art. 8 of the 1778 Franco-American Treaty of Alliance which prohibited either party from negotiating a separate peace or truce and provided that the parties “mutually engage not to lay down their arms, until the Independence of the united states shall have been formally or tacitly assured by the Treaty or Treaties that shall terminate the War” (Miller, Treaties description begins Treaties and Other International Acts of the United States of America, ed. Hunter Miller, Washington, D.C., 1931–1948; 8 vols. description ends , 2:38–39). France raised this issue in 1779 as Congress debated its ultimata for a peace treaty with Great Britain. As finally adopted, and included in JA’s 16 Oct. 1779 instructions, the ultimata prohibited JA from opening negotiations without Britain’s agreeing “to treat with the United States as sovereign, free And independent.” But in a 22 May 1779 letter, the French minister Conrad Alexandre Gérard indicated that France would not prolong the war to obtain formal, rather than tacit, recognition of American independence (vol. 8:203, 275; JA, D&A description begins Diary and Autobiography of John Adams, ed. L. H. Butterfield and others, Cambridge, 1961; 4 vols. description ends , 4:181).

In June 1781, with the war apparently stalemated, American war weariness evident, and an Austro-Russian mediation in the offing, Congress at the behest of France revoked JA’s commission to negotiate an Anglo-American peace and replaced it with a joint commission composed of JA, Benjamin Franklin, and John Jay. The new instructions accompanying it required the commissioners “to make the most candid & confidential communications” to the French ministry and to “undertake nothing in the Negotiations for Peace or truce without their knowledge & concurrence.” The commission was not prohibited from opening negotiations prior to Britain’s recognition of American independence, but the commissioners were instructed “to acceed to no Treaty of Peace which shall not be such as may … effectually secure the Independence and Sovereignty of the thirteen United States according to the form & effect of the treaties subsisting between the said States & his most Christian Majesty,” thus committing Congress to the provisions of Art. 8 of the alliance (vol. 11:374–376). In the event, the commissioners refused to negotiate until Britain agreed, in Richard Oswald’s second commission, to negotiate with the United States as independent and sovereign, and they did not inform the French government of the commencement of Anglo-American negotiations. The commissioners did, however, include a provision in the preliminary treaty that it would take effect only when an Anglo-French preliminary peace treaty was concluded (vols. 13:412–413, 483–485; 14:103).

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