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which should bind them, in all cases whatsoever.; and who emigrating at first in small numbers, when they might have been oppressed; such rights and privileges were constantly guarantied by the Crown to the emigrants and conquerors, to be held and enjoyed by them in the places to which they emigrated; and were confirmed by many repeated solemn engagements, made publick by proclamation, under the faith of which they did actually emigrate and conquer; that therefore the people of England had no rights, power, or privilege, to give to the emigrants, as these were, at the time of their emigration, possessed of all such rights equally with themselves.

That the Peers of England were possessed of very eminent and distinguished privileges in their own right as a branch of Legislation, a Court of Justice in the dernier resort for all appeals from the people, and in the first instance, for all causes instituted by the Representatives of the people; but that it does not appear that they ever considered themselves as acting in such capacities for the Colonies, the Peers having never to this day, heard or determined the causes of the Colonists in appeal, in which it ever was, and is their duty to serve the subjects within the Realm.

That from what has been said it appears that the emigrants could receive nothing from either the Peers or the people; the former being unable to communicate their privileges, and the latter on no more than an equal footing with themselves, but that with the King it was far otherwise; the royal prerogative, as now annexed to, and belonging to the Crown, being totally independent of the people, who cannot invade, add to, or diminish it, nor restrain or invalidate those legal grants which the prerogative hath a just right to give, and hath very liberally given for the encouragement of colonization; to some Colonies it granted almost all the royal powers of Government, which they hold and enjoy at this day; but to none of them did it grant less than to the first conquerors of this Island, in whose favour it is declared by a Royal Proclamation, "that they shall have the same privileges to all intents and purposes as the free born subjects of England."

That to the use of name or authority of the people of the parent state, to take away, or render ineffectual, the legal grants of the Crown to the Colonists, is delusive, and destroys that confidence which the people have ever had and ought to have of the most solemn royal grants in their favour, and renders unstable and insecure those very rights and privileges which prompted their emigration.

That your Colonists and your Petitioners having the most implicit confidence in the royal faith pledged to them in the most solemn manner, by your predecessors, rested satisfied with their different portions of the royal grants, and having been bred from their infancy to venerate the name of Parliament, a word still dear to the heart of every Briton, and considered as the palladium of liberty, and the great source from whence their own is derived, receive the several Acts of Parliament of England and Great Britain, for the regulation of the trade of the Colonies, as the salutary precautions of a prudent father for the prosperity of a wide extended family; and that in this light we received them, without a thought of questioning the right, the whole tenor of our conduct, will demonstrate, for above one hundred years.

That though we received these regulations of trade from our fellow-subjects of England and Great Britain, so advantageous to us as Colonists, as Englishmen and Britons, we did not thereby confer on them a power of legislating for us, far less than of destroying us and our children by devesting us of all rights and property.

That with reluctance we have been drawn from the prosecution of our internal affairs, to behold with amazement a plan, almost carried into execution, for enslaving the Colonies, founded, as we conceive, on a claim of Parliament to bind the Colonies in all cases whatsoever.

Your humble Petitioners have for several years, with deep and silent sorrow, lamented this unrestrained exercise of legislative power, still hoping from the interposition of the Sovereign, to avert that last and greatest of calamities, that of being reduced to an abject state of slavery, by having an arbitrary Government established in the Colonies, for the very attempting of which a Minister of your predecessor was impeached by a House of Commons,

With like sorrow do we find the Popish Religion established by law, which by treaty was only to be tolerated.

That the most essential rights of the Colonists have been invaded, and their property given and granted to your Majesty by men not entitled to such a power.

That the murderer of the Colonists hath been encouraged by another Act, dissolving and annulling their Trials by Juries of the vicinage, and that Fleets and Armies have been sent to enforce those dreadful laws.

We therefore, in this desperate extremity, most humbly beg leave to approach the Throne, to declare to your Majesty that our fellow-subjects in Great Britain, and consequently their Representatives, the House of Commons, have not a right, as we trust we have shown, to legislate for the Colonies, and that your Petitioners land the Colonists are not, nor ought to be, bound by any other laws than such as they have themselves assented to, and are not disallowed by your Majesty.

Your Petitioners do therefore make this claim and demand from their Sovereign, as guarantee of their just rights, on the faith and confidence of which they have settled and continue to reside in these distant parts of the Empire, that no laws shall be made and attempted to be forced upon them, injurious to their rights as Colonists, Englishmen, or Britons.

That your Petitioners fully sensible of the great advantages that have arisen from the regulations of trade in general, prior to the year 1760, as well to Great Britain and her Colonies, as to your Petitioners in particular, and being anxiously desirous of increasing the good effects of these laws, as well as to remove an obstacle which is new in our Government, and could not have existed on The principles of our Constitution, as it hath arisen from colonization, we do declare, for ourselves and the good people of this Island, that we freely consent to the operation of all such Acts of the British Parliament, as are limited to the regulation of our external commerce only, and the sole object of which is the mutual advantage of Great Britain and her Colonies.

We, your Petitioners, do therefore beseech your Majesty that you will be pleased, as the common parent of your subjects, to become a mediator between your European and American subjects, and to consider the latter, however far removed from your royal presence, as equally entitled to your protection and the benefits of the English Constitution, the deprivation of which must dissolve that dependence on the parent state, which it is our glory to acknowledge, whilst enjoying those rights under her protectieh; but should this bond of union be ever destroyed, and the Colonists reduced to consider themselves astributaries Jo Britain, they must cease to venerate her as an affectionate parent.

We beseech your Majesty to believe that it is our earnest prayer to Almighty Providence to preserve your Majesty in all happiness, prosperity, and honour, and that there never may be wanting one of your illustrious line to transmit the blessings of our excellent Constitution to the latest posterity, and to reign in the hearts of a loyal, grateful, and affectionate people.*


TO THE INHABITANTS OF NORTH AMERICA IN GENERAL, AND THOSE OF THE PROVINCE OF NEW-YORK, IN PARTICULAR.

FRIENDS AND FELLOW-SUBJECTS: At a time when the advocates for Ministerial measures are endeavouring by all the low artifices imaginable to promote their despotick views and interests; when the friends to freedom are calumniated and publickly abused by these mercenary wretches, it behoves the inhabitants of this Continent in general, and those of this Province in particular, to be on their guard against the poisonous and deadly productions of the men who are thus endeavouring to promote the wicked designs of the Ministry against us. It has been asserted by one of these writers, that the Colonies are inclined to

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