Benjamin Franklin Papers

Plain Truth, 17 November 1747

Plain Truth

Plain Truth: or, Serious Considerations On the Present State of the City of Philadelphia, and Province of Pennsylvania. By a Tradesman of Philadelphia. Printed in the Year MDCCXLVII. (Yale University Library)

During the late spring and early summer of 1747 the activity of French and Spanish privateers had been increasing off the Delaware capes, and each week’s newspapers reported some new action. To prevent their learning too much about the river and the defenseless condition of Philadelphia, the Council on July 4 tried to close the Delaware to foreign vessels, even those carrying flags of truce, by forbidding pilots to bring such vessels up the river above Marcus Hook except with special license. This measure was ineffective, however, for New Jersey imposed no similar restriction, and any hostile force might make its own way into the river in small boats. This was clearly demonstrated a few days afterwards when, on July 12, a raiding party of fifteen or twenty armed men from a French privateer actually landed at Edmund Liston’s plantation near Bombay Hook in New Castle County. They seized four slaves, carried off bedding, clothes, and furniture, and forced Liston to lead them to the neighboring plantation of James Hart, whose house they attacked and plundered, wounding Mrs. Hart, and taking a slave and goods to the value of £70. A few days later the same privateer seized the ship Mary off Cape Henlopen; her captain was wounded resisting the boarding party.9

The alarming news was brought to Philadelphia by express. Rumors multiplied and spread. The landing party at Bombay Hook, for example, was first reported to have numbered one hundred armed men. Spanish prisoners, Negroes, and other desperate characters were said to be plotting to seize a ship’s boat in the harbor and join the enemy at the mouth of the river; and the city watch was given special instructions to prevent them. The Council debated whether to call the Assembly into special session, but the Speaker successfully discouraged the proposal. With Governor Thomas on his way to England for his health, the Council could only wish that the Proprietor himself might “come over and undertake the cure.”1 In this atmosphere of frustration and fear the Assembly convened in its regular session in mid-August.

The President of the Council, Anthony Palmer, told the Assembly urgently that he believed the enemy planned to attack Philadelphia in the spring. “The Terror and Confusion, the Ruin of vast numbers of Families, the Destruction of Trade, the Bloodshed, Cruelty, and other fatal Consequences which must unavoidably attend the plundering or burning this City, are too obvious to need a Description.” The Assembly were unmoved: they approved the Council’s action respecting the Delaware pilots as “a prudent Step,” but thought that nothing practicable could be done to prevent raids like that on Liston’s and expressed the opinion that the enemy’s threats of attack on Philadelphia “rather appear to us as so many Bravados than what they either really intended or had the Power to do.” Palmer’s insistence that Philadelphia was defenseless would not only do nothing to avert danger, but would even increase popular apprehension.2

Privateering continued; interference with shipping increased. William Kelly, passenger on the sloop Elizabeth, bound from Providence to Philadelphia, deposed in Philadelphia on September 21 that he had been taken prisoner a month before off the North Carolina coast by a French privateer from Cap François, which had already taken three English prizes and took three more off the Virginia capes, another fifteen leagues from the Delaware capes, and two in Delaware Bay itself. “From the Success which attends our Enemies by Cruizing in our Bay without risque or opposition,” Palmer told the Assembly on October 16, “it may reasonably be expected that they will continue their Depredations in the Spring, and in all likelyhood block up the Trade of this flourishing Colony—a Loss which we apprehend will be sensibly felt by all sorts of People.” But the Assembly remained impervious to appeals and alarms. If any enemy privateers came up the river, they replied, it was the pilots’ fault for bringing them; and as for an attack on Philadelphia, “we hope there is no Danger.”3

To all but Quaker pacifists it seemed that something must be done, if not by the Assembly, then by the people. To win over moderate Quakers who, like James Logan, appreciated the obligations of power, Franklin printed in his Gazette of October 22 verses complimentary to Barclay’s Apology and the Quakers (“His works at least shall make me moderate prove,/ And those who practice what he writes, I’ll love.”), and two weeks later the paper contained a short piece arguing that the Quakers’ doctrine was not “absolutely against Defensive War.” Meanwhile he composed and published in pamphlet form on November 17 a strongly worded appeal for voluntary action.4

Plain Truth, Franklin remembered in his autobiography, “had a sudden and surprizing Effect.”5 It was defended, approved, recommended, and explained by citizens, printers, and ministers. He printed 2000 copies; it went into a second edition;6 it was translated into German;7 and extracts were reprinted in other colonies.8 Samuel Smith answered it on behalf of the Quakers, Christopher Saur on behalf of the German pacifists.9

Franklin promised in his pamphlet to submit a plan for a volunteer association for defense. This he did on November 21. Approved first at a meeting of tradesmen and mechanics, then by “the principal Gentlemen, Merchants and others” of the city, the Association was signed by more than 500 citizens on November 24.1 Within a few days the number of signatures exceeded 1000. Things were moving at last. The Mayor and Corporation of Philadelphia appealed to the Proprietor in London for “a Number of large Cannon” for a battery,2 the Council made a similar request, and Secretary Peters told Thomas Penn that small arms were said to be available at the Tower “for a Trifle.” The city’s merchants petitioned the Admiralty for a man-of-war in Delaware Bay3 and subscribed £1500 to buy sixteen 28-pounders and some smaller guns in Boston.4 The Assembly was called into special session on November 23; some 260 citizens, including, it was said, 62 Quakers formerly opposed to even defensive war, petitioned it to protect the city. The Assembly still took no action, and on November 28, in the midst of the crisis, adjourned. Carried along by popular feeling and not knowing what else to do, the Council resolved “to give all due Protection and Encouragement to the Members of the Association, it being the only Method thought on likely to preserve the Lives and Properties of their Fellow-Citizens in case of a Descent.”5

Franklin was intimately involved in all aspects of the Association. The volunteers had to be organized—he suggested how. They had to be trained—the New Printing-Office sold manuals of arms and even “good Muskets, all well fitted with Bayonets,” belts and cartouche boxes.6 To pay for fortifying the approaches to Philadelphia Franklin proposed a lottery, and then had to explain how it worked. He even designed the companies’ standards, decorating them with heraldic devices and sentiments of patriotic defiance. Documents recording these activities are printed below; and there are other reflections of Franklin’s involvement in the Association in his letters to Colden and Logan. A chronological outline may be helpful:

November 17, 1747: Plain Truth published.
21: Franklin addresses meeting at Walton’s schoolhouse.
23: The principal gentlemen approve the Association.
24: Citizens begin to sign the Association. See below, p. 205.
December 7: Franklin addresses Associators at the Court house. See below, p. 225.
 
5: Scheme of the Philadelphia Lottery published. See below, p. 220.
9: Public Fast Day proclaimed. See below, p. 226.
January 1, 1748: Associators reviewed; officers elected.
7: Public Fast Day observed.
February 8: First drawing of the Lottery.
March 21: Meeting of Associator Officers to draft regulations. See below, p. 279.
August 17: Cessation of hostilities proclaimed at Philadelphia.
September 10: First drawing of the Second Philadelphia Lottery. See below, p. 288.
May 17, 1749: Peace proclaimed at Philadelphia.

The Association was not regarded everywhere with approval or even equanimity. Jealous of his proprietary rights and sensitive to his position in the eyes of the British government, Thomas Penn wrote Lynford Lardner that Franklin’s pamphlet had “done much mischief,” adding dryly, “I am sure the people of America are too often ready to act in defiance of the Government they live in, without associating themselves for that purpose.”7 He considered the popular scheme hasty and ill advised, believed it threatened his interests. “This Association is founded on a Contempt to Government,” he wrote Secretary Richard Peters, “and cannot end in anything but Anarchy and Confusion. The People in general are so fond of what they call Liberty as to fall into Licenciousness, and when they know they may Act … by Orders of their own Substitutes, in a Body, and a Military manner, and independant of this Government, why should they not Act against it.” To establish “a Military Common Wealth”—which he thought the Association was—within the government of the province seemed to Penn “acting a part little less than Treason.”8 Franklin’s doctrine, he continued in a subsequent letter, “tho very true in it self, that Obedience to Governers is no more due than Protection to the People [see below, p. 199], yet it is not fit to be always in the heads of the Wild unthinking Multitude. … He is a dangerous Man and I should be very Glad he inhabited any other Country, as I believe him of a very uneasy Spirit. However as he is a Sort of Tribune of the People, he must be treated with regard.”9

Penn objected particularly to the clause of the Association by which the subscribers bound themselves to obey the laws and regulations of the military council, though the officers received commissions from the Governor’s Council. This, he warned, “is giving the power of the Militia, or calling the People together for their defence, from the King to themselves, and … I fear will be esteemed greatly Criminal.”1 The military council was in fact “the most dangerous part” of the Association, for it usurped “the King’s power of ordering the Militia, which you know our Kings are very jelous of, and if it should be known to the Ministers, would incline them to look with an Evil Eye over us on all Applications.”2 It was strange, Penn wrote with irritation, that “people cannot walk in a plain path, but when Men set up for refined polititians everything common plain sence dictates, is beneath their notice.”3

Like the members of the Council Secretary Richard Peters4 had approved the Association; he put it in a good light before the Proprietor, assuring Penn that the Associators’ “Conduct hitherto has been remarkably regular and moderate, without any angry Expressions or blustering behaviour.”5 Their election of their own officers, he explained, “was look’d upon by the Council only in the nature of a recommendation, the tenor of their Commissions being to receive their Orders from the Governor for the time being according to the rules of war.” Peters even expressed a belief that the Association would promote the proprietary interest by reconciling the Quakers to defense and so save the British Government “the Trouble, and the Quakers the Shame, of an Act of Parliament to incapacitate them from sitting in Assembly.”6 But Penn’s disapproval, repeated in letter after letter reaching Philadelphia in the spring of 1748, soon changed Peters’ opinions. Writing to Penn on June 16, he viewed it as his master did, as an illegal combination, expressed a strong abhorrence of it, was apprehensive of its leaders’ intentions, and hinted that it would be used to advance the political interests of those hostile to the proprietary party.7

But peace was already in prospect; the Association soon dwindled away; and though its leaders, notably Franklin, had won a province-wide fame and influence, they made no use of it in the October elections. “We are well pleased to find that the Association has had so good an Effect,” Penn informed Peters on August 31, “that the persons associated have Commissions in the Common Form, and do not act but by Authority from the president and Council, as well as that they have been so ready to attend their Duty when in Times of danger; their readyness to defend their Country is very commendable, and it was with reluctance that we objected to any thing done by persons that in general might intend nothing more than to defend themselves under their legal Commanders, … We shall ever be wel pleased to encourage preparations for defence, as is our Duty and hope before another War something more regular may be done, and as Peace will very soon be declared that they will become good Friends with those who think differently from them, or at least live quietly with them.”8

Plain Truth, &c.

It is said the wise Italians make this proverbial Remark on our Nation, viz. The English Feel, but they do not SEE. That is, they are sensible of Inconveniencies when they are present, but do not take sufficient Care to prevent them: Their natural Courage makes them too little apprehensive of Danger, so that they are often surpriz’d by it, unprovided of the proper Means of Security. When ’tis too late they are sensible of their Imprudence: After great Fires, they provide Buckets and Engines: After a Pestilence they think of keeping clean their Streets and common Shores: and when a Town has been sack’d by their Enemies, they provide for its Defence, &c. This Kind of After-Wisdom is indeed so common with us, as to occasion the vulgar, tho’ very significant Saying, When the Steed is stolen, you shut the Stable Door.

But the more insensible we generally are of publick Danger, and indifferent when warn’d of it, so much the more freely, openly, and earnestly, ought such as apprehend it, to speak their Sentiments; that if possible, those who seem to sleep, may be awaken’d, to think of some Means of Avoiding or Preventing the Mischief before it be too late.

Believing therefore that ’tis my Duty, I shall honestly speak my Mind in the following Paper.

War, at this Time, rages over a great Part of the known World; our News-Papers are Weekly filled with fresh Accounts of the Destruction it every where occasions. Pennsylvania, indeed, situate in the Center of the Colonies, has hitherto enjoy’d profound Repose; and tho’ our Nation is engag’d in a bloody War, with two great and powerful Kingdoms, yet, defended, in a great Degree, from the French on the one Hand by the Northern Provinces, and from the Spaniards on the other by the Southern, at no small Expence to each, our People have, till lately, slept securely in their Habitations.

There is no British Colony excepting this, but has made some Kind of Provision for its Defence; many of them have therefore never been attempted by an Enemy; and others that were attack’d, have generally defended themselves with Success. The Length and Difficulty of our Bay and River has been thought so effectual a Security to us, that hitherto no Means have been entered into that might discourage an Attempt upon us, or prevent its succeeding.

But whatever Security this might have been while both Country and City were poor, and the Advantage to be expected scarce worth the Hazard of an Attempt, it is now doubted whether we can any longer safely depend upon it. Our Wealth, of late Years much encreas’d, is one strong Temptation, our defenceless State another, to induce an Enemy to attack us; while the Acquaintance they have lately gained with our Bay and River, by Means of the Prisoners and Flags of Truce they have had among us; by Spies which they almost every where maintain, and perhaps from Traitors among ourselves; with the Facility of getting Pilots to conduct them; and the known Absence of Ships of War, during the greatest Part of the Year, from both Virginia and New-York, ever since the War began, render the Appearance of Success to the Enemy far more promising, and therefore highly encrease our Danger.

That our Enemies may have Spies abroad, and some even in these Colonies, will not be made much doubt of, when ’tis considered, that such has been the Practice of all Nations in all Ages, whenever they were engaged, or intended to engage in War. Of this we have an early Example in the Book of Judges (too too [sic] pertinent to our Case, and therefore I must beg leave a little to enlarge upon it) where we are told, Chap. xviii, v. 2, That the Children of Dan sent of their Family five Men from their Coasts to spie out the Land, and search it, saying, Go, search the Land. These Danites it seems were at this Time not very orthodox in their Religion, and their Spies met with a certain idolatrous Priest of their own Persuasion, v. 3, and they said to him, Who brought thee hither! what makest thou in this Place? and what hast thou here? [would to God no such Priests were to be found among us.]9 And they said unto him, verse 5, Ask Counsel of God, that we may know whether our Way which we go shall be prosperous? And the Priest said unto them, Go in Peace; before the Lord is your Way wherein you go. [Are there no Priests among us, think you, that might, in the like Case, give an Enemy as good Encouragement? ’Tis well known, that we have Numbers of the same Religion with those who of late encouraged the French to invade our Mother-Country.]1 And they came, Verse 7, to Laish, and saw the People that were therein, how they dwelt CARELESS, after the Manner of the Zidonians, QUIET and SECURE. They thought themselves secure, no doubt; and as they never had been disturbed, vainly imagined they never should. ’Tis not unlikely that some might see the Danger they were exposed to by living in that careless Manner; but that if these publickly expressed their Apprehensions, the rest reproached them as timorous Persons, wanting Courage or Confidence in their Gods, who (they might say) had hitherto protected them. But the Spies, Verse 8, returned, and said to their Countrymen, Verse 9, Arise that we may go up against them; for we have seen the Land, and behold it is very good! And are ye still? Be not slothful to go. Verse 10, When ye go, ye shall come unto a People SECURE; [that is, a People that apprehend no Danger, and therefore have made no Provision against it; great Encouragement this!] and to a large Land, and a Place where there is no Want of any Thing. What could they desire more? Accordingly we find, in the following Verses, that Six hundred Men only, appointed with Weapons of War, undertook the Conquest of this large Land; knowing that 600 Men, armed and disciplined, would be an Over-match perhaps for 60,000, unarmed, undisciplined, and off their Guard. And when they went against it, the idolatrous Priest, Verse 17, with his graven Image, and his Ephod, and his Teraphim, and his molten Image, [Plenty of superstitious Trinkets] joined with them, and, no doubt, gave them all the Intelligence and Assistance in his Power; his Heart, as the Text assures us, being glad, perhaps for Reasons more than one. And now, what was the Fate of poor Laish! The 600 Men being arrived, found, as the Spies had reported, a People QUIET and SECURE, Verse 20, 21.2 And they smote them with the Edge of the Sword, and burnt the City with Fire; and there was no Deliverer, because it was far from Zidon. Not so far from Zidon, however, as Pennsylvania is from Britain; and yet we are, if possible, more careless than the People of Laish! As the Scriptures are given for our Reproof, Instruction and Warning, may we make a due Use of this Example, before it be too late!

And is our Country, any more than our City, altogether free from Danger? Perhaps not. We have, ’tis true, had a long Peace with the Indians: But it is a long Peace indeed, as well as a long Lane, that has no Ending. The French know the Power and Importance of the Six Nations, and spare no Artifice, Pains or Expence, to gain them to their Interest. By their Priests they have converted many to their Religion, and these have openly espoused their Cause. The rest appear irresolute which Part to take; no Persuasions, tho’ enforced with costly Presents, having yet been able to engage them generally on our Side, tho’ we had numerous Forces on their Borders, ready to second and support them. What then may be expected, now those Forces are, by Orders from the Crown, to be disbanded; when our boasted Expedition is laid aside, thro’ want (as it may appear to them) either of Strength or Courage; when they see that the French, and their Indians, boldly, and with Impunity, ravage the Frontiers of New-York, and scalp the Inhabitants; when those few Indians that engaged with us against the French, are left exposed to their Resentment: When they consider these Things, is there no Danger that, thro’ Disgust at our Usage, joined with Fear of the French Power, and greater Confidence in their Promises and Protection than in ours, they may be wholly gained over by our Enemies, and join in the War against us? If such should be the Case, which God forbid, how soon may the Mischief spread to our Frontier Counties? And what may we expect to be the Consequence, but deserting of Plantations, Ruin, Bloodshed and Confusion!

Perhaps some in the City, Towns and Plantations near the River, may say to themselves, An Indian War on the Frontiers will not affect us; the Enemy will never come near our Habitations; let those concern’d take Care of themselves. And others who live in the Country, when they are told of the Danger the City is in from Attempts by Sea, may say, What is that to us? The Enemy will be satisfied with the Plunder of the Town, and never think it worth his while to visit our Plantations: Let the Town take care of itself. These are not mere Suppositions, for I have heard some talk in this strange Manner. But are these the Sentiments of true Pennsylvanians, of Fellow-Countrymen, or even of Men that have common Sense or Goodness? Is not the whole Province one Body, united by living under the same Laws, and enjoying the same Priviledges? Are not the People of City and Country connected as Relations both by Blood and Marriage, and in Friendships equally dear? Are they not likewise united in Interest, and mutually useful and necessary to each other? When the Feet are wounded, shall the Head say, It is not me; I will not trouble myself to contrive Relief! Or if the Head is in Danger, shall the Hands say, We are not affected, and therefore will lend no Assistance! No. For so would the Body be easily destroyed: But when all Parts join their Endeavours for its Security, it is often preserved. And such should be the Union between the Country and the Town; and such their mutual Endeavours for the Safety of the Whole. When New-England, a distant Colony, involv’d itself in a grievous Debt to reduce Cape-Breton, we freely gave Four Thousand Pounds for their Relief.4 And at another Time, remembring that Great Britain, still more distant, groan’d under heavy Taxes in Supporting the War, we threw in our Mite to their Assistance, by a free Gift of Three Thousand Pounds:5 And shall Country and Town join in helping Strangers (as those comparatively are) and yet refuse to assist each other?

But whatever different Opinions we have of our Security in other Respects, our Trade, all seem to agree, is in Danger of being ruin’d in another Year. The great Success of our Enemies, in two different Cruizes this last Summer in our Bay, must give them the greatest Encouragement to repeat more frequently their Visits, the Profit being almost certain, and the Risque next to nothing. Will not the first Effect of this be, an Enhauncing of the Price of all foreign Goods to the Tradesman and Farmer, who use or consume them? For the Rate of Insurance will increase in Proportion to the Hazard of Importing them; and in the same Proportion will the Price of those Goods increase. If the Price of the Tradesman’s Work and the Farmer’s Produce would encrease equally with the Price of foreign Commodities, the Damage would not be so great: But the direct contrary must happen. For the same Hazard, or Rate of Insurance, that raises the Price of what is imported, must be deducted out of, and lower the Price of what is exported. Without this Addition and Deduction, as long as the Enemy cruize at our Capes, and take those Vessels that attempt to go out, as well as those that endeavour to come in, none can afford to trade, and Business must be soon at a Stand. And will not the Consequences be, A discouraging of many of the Vessels that us’d to come from other Places to purchase our Produce, and thereby a Turning of the Trade to Ports that can be entered with less Danger, and capable of furnishing them with the same Commodities, as New-York, &c? A Lessening of Business to every Shopkeeper, together with Multitudes of bad Debts; the high Rate of Goods discouraging the Buyers, and the low Rates of their Labour and Produce rendering them unable to pay for what they had bought: Loss of Employment to the Tradesman, and bad Pay for what little he does: And lastly, Loss of many Inhabitants, who will retire to other Provinces not subject to the like Inconveniencies; whence a Lowering of the Value of Lands, Lots, and Houses.

The Enemy, no doubt, have been told, That the People of Pennsylvania are Quakers, and against all Defence, from a Principle of Conscience; this, tho’ true of a Part, and that a small Part only of the Inhabitants, is commonly said of the Whole; and what may make it look probable to Strangers, is, that in Fact, nothing is done by any Part of the People towards their Defence. But to refuse Defending one’s self or one’s Country, is so unusual a Thing among Mankind, that possibly they may not believe it, till by Experience they find, they can come higher and higher up our River, seize our Vessels, land and plunder our Plantations and Villages, and retire with their Booty unmolested. Will not this confirm the Report, and give them the greatest Encouragement to strike one bold Stroke for the City, and for the whole Plunder of the River?

It is said by some, that the Expence of a Vessel to guard our Trade, would be very heavy, greater than perhaps all the Enemy can be supposed to take from us at Sea would amount to; and that it would be cheaper for the Government to open an Insurance-Office, and pay all Losses. But is this right Reasoning? I think not: For what the Enemy takes is clear Loss to us, and Gain to him; encreasing his Riches and Strength as much as it diminishes ours, so making the Difference double; whereas the Money paid our own Tradesmen for Building and Fitting out a Vessel of Defence, remains in the Country, and circulates among us; what is paid to the Officers and Seamen that navigate her, is also spent ashore, and soon gets into other Hands; the Farmer receives the Money for her Provisions; and on the whole, nothing is clearly lost to the Country but her Wear and Tear, or so much as she sells for at the End of the War less than her first Cost. This Loss, and a trifling one it is, is all the Inconvenience; But how many and how great are the Conveniencies and Advantages! And should the Enemy, thro’ our Supineness and Neglect to provide for the Defence both of our Trade and Country, be encouraged to attempt this City, and after plundering us of our Goods, either burn it, or put it to Ransom; how great would that Loss be! Besides the Confusion, Terror, and Distress, so many Hundreds of Families would be involv’d in!

The Thought of this latter Circumstance so much affects me, that I cannot forbear expatiating somewhat more upon it. You have, my dear Countrymen, and Fellow Citizens, Riches to tempt a considerable Force to unite and attack you, but are under no Ties or Engagements to unite for your Defence. Hence, on the first Alarm, Terror will spread over All; and as no Man can with Certainty depend that another will stand by him, beyond Doubt very many will seek Safety by a speedy Flight. Those that are reputed rich, will flee, thro’ Fear of Torture, to make them produce more than they are able. The Man that has a Wife and Children, will find them hanging on his Neck, beseeching him with Tears to quit the City, and save his Life, to guide and protect them in that Time of general Desolation and Ruin. All will run into Confusion, amidst Cries and Lamentations, and the Hurry and Disorder of Departers, carrying away their Effects. The Few that remain will be unable to resist. Sacking the City will be the first, and Burning it, in all Probability, the last Act of the Enemy. This, I believe, will be the Case, if you have timely Notice. But what must be your Condition, if suddenly surprized, without previous Alarm, perhaps in the Night! Confined to your Houses, you will have nothing to trust to but the Enemy’s Mercy. Your best Fortune will be, to fall under the Power of Commanders of King’s Ships, able to controul the Mariners; and not into the Hands of licentious Privateers. Who can, without the utmost Horror, conceive the Miseries of the Latter! when your Persons, Fortunes, Wives and Daughters, shall be subject to the wanton and unbridled Rage, Rapine and Lust, of Negroes, Molattoes, and others, the vilest and most abandoned of Mankind.* A dreadful Scene! which some may represent as exaggerated. I think it my Duty to warn you: Judge for yourselves.

’Tis true, with very little Notice, the Rich may shift for themselves. The Means of speedy Flight are ready in their Hands; and with some previous Care to lodge Money and Effects in distant and secure Places, tho’ they should lose much, yet enough may be left them, and to spare. But most unhappily circumstanced indeed are we, the middling People, the Tradesmen, Shopkeepers, and Farmers of this Province and City! We cannot all fly with our Families; and if we could, how shall we subsist? No; we and they, and what little we have gained by hard Labour and Industry, must bear the Brunt: The Weight of Contributions, extorted by the Enemy (as it is of Taxes among ourselves) must be surely borne by us. Nor can it be avoided as we stand at present; for tho’ we are numerous, we are quite defenceless, having neither Forts, Arms, Union, nor Discipline. And tho’ it were true, that our Trade might be protected at no great Expence, and our Country and our City easily defended, if proper Measures were but taken; yet who shall take these Measures? Who shall pay that Expence? On whom may we fix our Eyes with the least Expectation that they will do any one Thing for our Security? Should we address that wealthy and powerful Body of People, who have ever since the War governed our Elections, and filled almost every Seat in our Assembly; should we intreat them to consider, if not as Friends, at least as Legislators, that Protection is as truly due from the Government to the People, as Obedience from the People to the Government; and that if on account of their religious Scruples, they themselves could do no Act for our Defence, yet they might retire, relinquish their Power for a Season, quit the Helm to freer Hands during the present Tempest, to Hands chosen by their own Interest too, whose Prudence and Moderation, with regard to them, they might safely confide in; secure, from their own native Strength, of resuming again their present Stations, whenever it shall please them: Should we remind them, that the Publick Money, raised from All, belongs to All; that since they have, for their own Ease, and to secure themselves in the quiet Enjoyment of their Religious Principles (and may they long enjoy them) expended such large Sums to oppose Petitions, and engage favourable Representations of their Conduct, if they themselves could by no Means be free to appropriate any Part of the Publick Money for our Defence; yet it would be no more than Justice to spare us a reasonable Sum for that Purpose, which they might easily give to the King’s Use as heretofore, leaving all the Appropriation to others, who would faithfully apply it as we desired: Should we tell them, that tho’ the Treasury be at present empty, it may soon be filled by the outstanding Publick Debts collected; or at least Credit might be had for such a Sum, on a single Vote of the Assembly: That tho’ they themselves may be resigned and easy under this naked, defenceless State of the Country, it is far otherwise with a very great Part of the People; with us, who can have no Confidence that God will protect those that neglect the Use of rational Means for their Security; nor have any Reason to hope, that our Losses, if we should suffer any, may be made up by Collections in our Favour at Home? Should we conjure them by all the Ties of Neighbourhood, Friendship, Justice and Humanity, to consider these Things; and what Distraction, Misery and Confusion, what Desolation and Distress, may possibly be the Effect of their unseasonable Predominancy and Perseverance; yet all would be in vain: For they have already been by great Numbers of the People petitioned in vain. Our late Governor did for Years sollicit, request, and even threaten them in vain. The Council have since twice remonstrated to them in vain. Their religious Prepossessions are unchangeable, their Obstinacy invincible. Is there then the least Hope remaining, that from that Quarter any Thing should arise for our Security?

And is our Prospect better, if we turn our Eyes to the Strength of the opposite Party, those Great and rich Men, Merchants and others, who are ever railing at Quakers for doing what their Principles seem to require, and what in Charity we ought to believe they think their Duty, but take no one Step themselves for the Publick Safety? They have so much Wealth and Influence, if they would use it, that they might easily, by their Endeavours and Example, raise a military Spirit among us, make us fond, studious of, and expert in Martial Discipline, and effect every Thing that is necessary, under God, for our Protection. But Envy seems to have taken Possession of their Hearts, and to have eaten out and destroyed every generous, noble, Publick-spirited Sentiment. Rage at the Disappointment of their little Schemes for Power, gnaws their Souls, and fills them with such cordial Hatred to their Opponents, that every Proposal, by the Execution of which those may receive Benefit as well as themselves, is rejected with Indignation. What, say they, shall we lay out our Money to protect the Trade of Quakers? Shall we fight to defend Quakers? No; Let the Trade perish, and the City burn; let what will happen, we shall never lift a Finger to prevent it. Yet the Quakers have Conscience to plead for their Resolution not to fight, which these Gentlemen have not: Conscience with you, Gentlemen, is on the other Side of the Question: Conscience enjoins it as a Duty on you (and indeed I think it such on every Man) to defend your Country, your Friends, your aged Parents, your Wives, and helpless Children: And yet you resolve not to perform this Duty, but act contrary to your own Consciences, because the Quakers act according to theirs. ’Till of late I could scarce believe the Story of him who refused to pump in a sinking Ship, because one on board, whom he hated, would be saved by it as well as himself. But such, it seems, is the Unhappiness of human Nature, that our Passions, when violent, often are too hard for the united Force of Reason, Duty and Religion.

Thus unfortunately are we circumstanc’d at this Time, my dear Countrymen and Fellow-Citizens; we, I mean, the middling People, the Farmers, Shopkeepers and Tradesmen of this City and Country. Thro’ the Dissensions of our Leaders, thro’ mistaken Principles of Religion, join’d with a Love of Worldly Power, on the one Hand; thro’ Pride, Envy and implacable Resentment on the other; our Lives, our Families and little Fortunes, dear to us as any Great Man’s can be to him, are to remain continually expos’d to Destruction, from an enterprizing, cruel, now well-inform’d, and by Success encourag’d Enemy. It seems as if Heaven, justly displeas’d at our growing Wickedness, and determin’d to punish* this once favour’d Land, had suffered our Chiefs to engage in these foolish and mischievous Contentions, for little Posts and paltry Distinctions, that our Hands might be bound up, our Understandings darkned and misled, and every Means of our Security neglected. It seems as if our greatest Men, our Cives nobilissimi of both Parties, had sworn the Ruin of the Country, and invited the French, our most inveterate Enemy, to destroy it. Where then shall we seek for Succour and Protection? The Government we are immediately under denies it to us; and if the Enemy comes, we are far from Zidon, and there is no Deliverer near. Our Case indeed is dangerously bad; but perhaps there is yet a Remedy, if we have but the Prudence and the Spirit to apply it.

If this now flourishing City, and greatly improving Colony, is destroy’d and ruin’d, it will not be for want of Numbers of Inhabitants able to bear Arms in its Defence. ’Tis computed that we have at least (exclusive of the Quakers) 60,000 Fighting Men, acquainted with Fire-Arms, many of them Hunters and Marksmen, hardy and bold. All we want is Order, Discipline, and a few Cannon. At present we are like the separate Filaments of Flax before the Thread is form’d, without Strength because without Connection; but Union would make us strong and even formidable: Tho’ the Great should neither help nor join us; tho’ they should even oppose our Uniting, from some mean Views of their own, yet, if we resolve upon it, and it please God to inspire us with the necessary Prudence and Vigour, it may be effected. Great Numbers of our People are of British Race, and tho’ the fierce fighting Animals of those happy Islands, are said to abate their native Fire and Intrepidity, when removed to a Foreign Clime, yet with the People ’tis not so; Our Neighbours of New-England afford the World a convincing Proof, that Britons, tho’ a Hundred Years transplanted, and to the remotest Part of the Earth, may yet retain, even to the third and fourth Descent, that Zeal for the Publick Good, that military Prowess, and that undaunted Spirit, which has in every Age distinguished their Nation. What Numbers have we likewise of those brave People, whose Fathers in the last Age made so glorious a Stand for our Religion and Liberties, when invaded by a powerful French Army, join’d by Irish Catholicks, under a bigotted Popish King! Let the memorable Siege of Londonderry,1 and the signal Actions of the Iniskillingers,2 by which the Heart of that Prince’s Schemes was broken, be perpetual Testimonies of the Courage and Conduct of those noble Warriors! Nor are there wanting amongst us, Thousands of that Warlike Nation, whose Sons have ever since the Time of Caesar maintained the Character he gave their Fathers, of joining the most obstinate Courage to all the other military Virtues. I mean the brave and steady Germans. Numbers of whom have actually borne Arms in the Service of their respective Princes; and if they fought well for their Tyrants and Oppressors, would they refuse to unite with us in Defence of their newly acquired and most precious Liberty and Property? Were this Union form’d, were we once united, thoroughly arm’d and disciplin’d, was every Thing in our Power done for our Security, as far as human Means and Foresight could provide, we might then, with more Propriety, humbly ask the Assistance of Heaven, and a Blessing on our lawful Endeavours. The very Fame of our Strength and Readiness would be a Means of Discouraging our Enemies; for ’tis a wise and true Saying, that One Sword often keeps another in the Scabbard. The Way to secure Peace is to be prepared for War. They that are on their Guard, and appear ready to receive their Adversaries, are in much less Danger of being attack’d, than the supine, secure and negligent. We have yet a Winter before us, which may afford a good and almost sufficient Opportunity for this, if we seize and improve it with a becoming Vigour. And if the Hints contained in this Paper are so happy as to meet with a suitable Disposition of Mind in his Countrymen and Fellow Citizens, the Writer of it will, in a few Days, lay before them a Form of an Association for the Purposes herein mentioned, together with a practicable Scheme for raising the Money necessary for the Defence of our Trade, City, and Country, without laying a Burthen on any Man.

May the God of Wisdom, Strength and Power, the Lord of the Armies of Israel, inspire us with Prudence in this Time of Danger; take away from us all the Seeds of Contention and Division, and unite the Hearts and Counsels of all of us, of whatever Sect or Nation, in one Bond of Peace, Brotherly Love, and generous Publick Spirit; May he give us Strength and Resolution to amend our Lives, and remove from among us every Thing that is displeasing to him; afford us his most gracious Protection, confound the Designs of our Enemies, and give Peace in all our Borders, is the sincere Prayer of

A Tradesman of Philadelphia.3

[Note numbering follows the Franklin Papers source.]

9Pa. Col. Recs., V, 80–2, 89–93, III, 117–8, 226.

1Ibid., 89, 92–4.

2Ibid., 99, 101–3.

3Ibid., 113, 125–6.

4Although Pa. Gaz., Nov. 12, 1747, announced that the pamphlet would be published Saturday, i.e., Nov. 14, Richard Peters stated explicitly that it appeared Nov. 17. According to Peters (see below, p. 215) BF received advice on strategy from Tench Francis, William Coleman, and Thomas Hopkinson.

5Par. Text edit., p. 278.

6This edition contained at the end a translation of the Latin exordium which BF had placed on the title page. See below, p. 204 n.

7By the Philadelphia German printer, Joseph Crellius (or Crell), as Die Lautere Wahrheit; and printed by Gotthard Armbrüster. BF supplied the Association with 1000 “Dutch Plain Truths” at 3d. each. Eddy, Account Books. LedgerD,” p. 80.

8N.-Y. Gaz., Dec. 14, 1747.

9Smith, Necessary Truth (Evans 6241), and Saur, Verschiedene Christliche Wahrheiten (Evans 6233). Of the first printing of 1000 copies of Smith’s pamphlet, 500 were distributed free by the printer and the remaining 500 by the author. Albert C. Myers, ed., Hannah Logan’s Courtship (Phila., 1904), p. 133.

1See below, p. 205.

2Minutes of the Common Council of the City of Philadelphia.1704 to 1776 (Phila., 1847), pp. 488–90.

3Pa. Col. Recs., V, 160–2.

4Peters to Penn, Feb. 1, 1748. Penn MSS, Official Corres., IV, 89, Hist. Soc. Pa.

5Pa. Col. Recs., V, 158, 160–3.

6Pa. Gaz., March 8, 1748. Writing Penn in warm praise of BF, James Logan summed up the latter’s services in the Association: “He it was that by publishing a small piece in the year 1747 with his further private contrivances, occasioned the raising of ten Companies of near one hundred men each in Philadelphia and above one hundred companies in the Province and Counties, of which I have a List. He it was who set on foot two Lotteries for Erecting of Batteries, purchasing great guns and to dispatch which he went himself to New York and borrowed there 14— which were brought thro’ New Jersey by land, and here mounted till such Time as there could be others had from England, in which thy assistance is in some Measure expected; and all this without much appearing in any part of it himself, unless in his going to New York himself in Company with others of whose going he was the occasion, for he is the principal Mover and very Soul of the Whole.” Nov. 24, 1749, transcript (Sparks), Harvard Coll. Lib.

7Penn to Lardner, March 29, 1748, Penn Letter Book, II, 223, Hist. Soc. Pa.

8Penn to Peters, March 30, 1748, ibid., 225; quoted in Hubertis Cummings, Richard Peters: Provincial Secretary and Cleric, 1704–1776 (Phila., 1944), pp. 134–6.

9Penn to Peters, June 9, 1748, Penn Letter Book, II, 232, Hist. Soc. Pa.

1Penn to President and Council, March 30, 1748, ibid., 228.

2Penn to Peters, June 9, 1748, ibid., 234.

3Same to same, March 30, 1748, ibid., 225.

4Richard Peters (c. 1704–1776), secretary of the Province and clerk of the Council, 1743–62, was born in England, studied at Leyden, the Inner Temple, London, and at Wadham College, Oxford, and was ordained an Anglican clergyman, 1731. When his second marriage was discovered to be bigamous, he came to America, 1734; served briefly as assistant rector of Christ Church, Philadelphia, 1736; and in 1737 was appointed secretary of the Provincial Land Office, a post he held until 1760. He was named to the Governor’s Council, 1749. In his public roles he attended the Albany Congress, 1754, and the Treaty of Fort Stanwix, 1768. Always loyal to the proprietary interest, he resigned his office in 1762 and returned to the ministry as rector of Christ Church and St. Peter’s. A High Churchman, who once suspected the Quakers and opposed George Whitefield, he grew tolerant as he grew older, and even allowed the latter to preach in his churches, 1763. He was one of the first trustees of the Academy and College of Philadelphia, preached the sermon on the opening of the Academy, 1751, and served as president of its trustees, 1756–64. Hubertis Cummings, Richard Peters (Phila., 1944); DAB.

5Peters to Proprietaries, Feb. 1, 1748, Penn MSS, Official Corres., IV, 89, Hist. Soc. Pa.

6Peters to Penn. March 25, June 13, 1748, ibid., 93, 94.

7Same to same, June 16, 1748, ibid., 97. Theodore Thayer, Pennsylvania Politics and the Growth of Democracy, 1740–1776 (Harrisburg, Pa., 1953), pp. 21–3. The Council defended the Association and their support of it in a letter to the Proprietors, July 30, 1748. Pa. Col. Recs., V, 319–23.

8Penn to Peters, Aug. 31, 1748, Penn Letter Book, II, 242, Hist. Soc. Pa. There is a summary account of the Association and the construction of the batteries, with quotations from the Council minutes and Pa. Gaz., in I Pa. Arch., XII, 437–42.

9Brackets in this paragraph in the original.

1Roman Catholics, who supported the Young Pretender’s invasion of Britain.

2Should be: verses 27, 28.

3A branch of the Mohawks who, accepted as hostages by the French, “were at length seduced by the Artifices of the Priests, to desert their Countrey, and take up their Residence altogether in Canada, and having been converted to their Superstition, and reconciled to their foolish Customs, to say their Prayers by Tale of Beeds. The English Mohawks, by way of Derision call them the Praying Indians. …” Paul A. W. Wallace, Conrad Weiser (Phila., 1945), p. 593. See also Cadwallader Colden’s description in his History of the Five Indian Nations (London, 1747), p. 52.

4In July 1745 the Assembly voted £4000 “to the King’s Use … to be laid out … in the purchase of Bread, Beef, Port, Flour, Wheat or other Grain, or any of them, within this Province. …” 8 Pa. Arch., IV, 3042. According to BF, some members of the Council advised Governor Thomas to reject the bill, since it did not specifically authorize the purchase of gunpowder; but Thomas, wiser, replied, “I shall take the Money, for I understand very well their Meaning; Other Grain, is Gunpowder.” The Assembly made no objection. Par. Text edit., p. 290.

5Out of consideration for the many taxes their fellow subjects in Great Britain paid, and “to demonstrate the Fidelity, Loyalty, and Affection, of the Inhabitants of this Province to our gracious King”—so they publicly declared—the Assembly in October 1741 unanimously voted £3000 “for the Use of the King … to be applied to such Uses as he … shall think fit to direct and appoint.” 8 Pa. Arch., IV, 2709.

6See above, p. 180; also Pa. Col. Recs., V, 117–8; I Pa. Arch., I, 759–60; Pa. Gaz., July 16, 1747.

7The ship Mary, Captain Bernard Martin, on a voyage from Antigua to Philadelphia, was attacked and boarded near Cape Henlopen on July 14 by a party of some 30 armed men, mostly French and Spanish, from the privateer whose men attacked the plantations of Liston and Hart two days before. They drove the crew below deck, shot and wounded Martin, and seized the vessel. Martin and seven of his crew were put ashore next day. Pa. Col. Recs., V, 115–7; Pa. Gaz., July 23, 1747.

8For Pompey’s siege and entry into Jerusalem, see Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews, XIV, iv, 1–4, and Wars of the Jews, I, vii, 3–4; on fanatic Sabbath observance, see Antiquities, XII, vi, 2. All are loosely paraphrased here.

9Sallust, De Conjuratione Catilinae, 52: 24.

1Londonderry, the chief Protestant stronghold in Ireland, was besieged by the forces of James II, April 1910–July 30, 1689, when ships broke through the harbor obstructions and brought relief. Through their leader and spokesman George Walker, rector of Donaghmere, the men of Derry had proudly rejected every proposal of the besiegers: “No surrender.” DNB, under Walker.

2During the siege of Londonderry, offensive operations by the Protestant forces were directed from Enniskillen (or Inniskilling), Co. Fermanaugh. Organized into a troop of horse and a regiment of foot, the citizens, under Col. William Wolseley, defeated a much superior force sent against the town by James II, at the battle of Newtown Butler, July 31, 1689. J. W. Fortescue, A History of the British Army, I (London, 1910), 344; DNB, under Wolseley.

3The title page contained a quotation from Marcus Porcius Cato’s speech in Sallust, De Conjuratione Catilinae, 52: 4–6, 24–5, 28–9. BF printed in Pa. Gaz., Nov. 19, a translation submitted by a reader, and reprinted it in the second edition of the pamphlet at the end of the text: “Should the City be taken, all will be lost to the Conquered. Therefore if you desire to preserve your Buildings, Houses and Country Seats, your Statues, Paintings, and all your other Possessions, which you so highly esteem; if you wish to continue in the Enjoyment of them, or to have Leisure for any future Pleasures; I beseech you by the immortal Gods, rouse at last, awake from your Lethargy, and save the Common-Wealth. It is not the trifling Concern of Injuries from your Allies that demands your Attention; your Liberties, Lives and Fortunes, with every Thing that is interesting and dear to you, are in the most imminent Danger.

“Can you doubt of, or delay what you ought to do, now, when the Enemies Swords are unsheath’d, and descending on your Heads?—The Affair is shocking and horrid! Yet, perhaps, you are not afraid.—Yes—You are terrified to the highest Degree. But thro’ Indolence and Supineness of Soul, gazing at each other, to see who shall first rise to your Succour; and a presumptuous Dependance on the immortal Gods, who have indeed preserv’d this Republick in many dangerous Seasons; you delay and neglect every Thing necessary for your Preservation. Be not deceived—Divine Assistance and Protection are not to be obtain’d by timorous Prayers, and womanish Supplications. To succeed, you must join salutary Counsels, Vigilance, and couragious Actions. If you sink into Effeminacy and Cowardice; if you desert the Tender and Helpless, by Providence committed to your Charge; never presume to implore the Gods:—It will provoke them, and raise their Indignation against you.”

Authorial notes

[The following note(s) appeared in the margins or otherwise outside the text flow in the original source, and have been moved here for purposes of the digital edition.]

º ‡The Praying Indians.3

º *By Accounts, the ragged Crew of the Spanish Privateer that plundered Mr. Liston’s, and another Plantation, a little below Newcastle, was composed of such as these.6 The Honour and Humanity of their Officers may be judg’d of, by the Treatment they gave poor Capt. Brown, whom they took with Martin’s Ship in Returning from their Cruize. Because he bravely defended himself and Vessel longer than they expected, for which every generous Enemy would have esteem’d him, did they, after he had struck and submitted, barbarously stab and murder him, tho’ on his Knees begging Quarter!7

º *When God determined to punish his chosen People, the Inhabitants of Jerusalem, who, tho’ Breakers of his other Laws, were scrupulous Observers of that One which required keeping holy the Sabbath Day; he suffered even the strict Observation of that Command to be their Ruin: For Pompey observing that they then obstinately refused to fight, made a general Assault on that Day, took the Town, and butcher’d them with as little Mercy as he found Resistance.  Josephus.8

º ‡Conjuravere cives nobilissimi Patriam incendere; Gallorum Gentem, infestissimam nomini Romano, ad Bellum arcessunt.  Cat. in Salust.9

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