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+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Achenwall's Observations on North America, translated by J. G. Rosengarten.
+ </title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Achenwall's Observations on North America, by
+Gottfried Achenwall
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Achenwall's Observations on North America
+
+Author: Gottfried Achenwall
+
+Translator: J.G. Rosengarten
+
+Release Date: March 4, 2008 [EBook #24752]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ACHENWALL'S OBSERVATIONS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Frank van Drogen, Bernd Meyer and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2>ACHENWALL'S OBSERVATIONS</h2>
+
+<p class="center">ON</p>
+
+<h1>N O R T H &nbsp; A M E R I C A</h1>
+
+<div><br /></div>
+
+<h2>1767</h2>
+
+<div><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<p class="center">TRANSLATED BY</p>
+
+<h2>J. G. ROSENGARTEN</h2>
+
+<div><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<hr style="width: 10%;" />
+<p class="center"><i>Reprinted from the Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography,<br />
+ January, 1903</i></p>
+<hr style="width: 10%;" />
+<div><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<p class="center">PHILADELPHIA</p>
+<p class="center">1903</p>
+
+<div><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2> ACHENWALL'S OBSERVATIONS ON NORTH<br />
+ AMERICA, 1767.</h2>
+
+<blockquote>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">[Franklin paid a short visit to Germany in the summer of 1766, and</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">at G&ouml;ttingen met a number of the professors of the University. One</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">of them, Professor Achenwall, published in the "Hanoverian Magazine,"</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">in the volume beginning 1767, p. 258, etc., "Some Observations on</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">North America and the British Colonies from verbal information of</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Dr. Franklin," and this article was reprinted in Frankfort and Leipsic</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">in 1769. There is a copy of this reprint in the Loganian Library,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">from which the following translation was made. There is a copy of the</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Magazine in the Astor Library, New York. It is of interest as showing</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">the impression made by Franklin on his German auditors, although it</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">is clear that Achenwall did not report quite correctly.&mdash;J. G. R.]</span><br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The most complete work on the British Colonies in North America is the
+Summary historical and political by William Douglas, of which the second
+improved edition was published in London, 1760, in two 8vo. volumes.
+That doctor collected material for many years and was in America, and
+gives valuable intelligence, especially of the Colonies he visited, but
+his book has no system. Prof. Kalm has much that is good in his travels
+in North America, and often cites Franklin, but did not altogether
+understand what he said, and Franklin never saw Kalm's book until he
+came across a German translation in Hanover.</p>
+
+<p>The east coast of North America, where the British Colonies lie, is
+generally colder than the countries on the same stretch in Europe, nor
+has it been observed that owing to the decay of forests and cultivation
+the climate is becoming noticeably milder. Almost the whole eastern
+coast of North America is sandy, many little islands along the coast are
+sand banks, thrown up gradually by the sea. The coast of Florida is
+sandy and unfruitful, but the interior is good land. The native Indians
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>consist of many small nations, each with its own language, quite
+different from that of their neighbors. They are all of one figure as if
+descended from a common ancestor,&mdash;all brown in color, with straight
+black hair, eyes all of one color, and all beardless, and they call
+Europeans the bearded nation. They live in the wilds, except a few that
+have been gathered in villages and are partly civilized. They live on
+plants and by hunting, without farms or cattle, chickens, horses etc.</p>
+
+<p>Before the arrival of Europeans, their important plants were Turkish
+corn or maize; a sort of beans; tobacco. Maize and Tobacco are found
+only in America, and were brought from the new world to the old. Maize
+and Beans they cook and use bear fat in place of butter as dressing, but
+no salt. Smoking tobacco is an old custom, especially at their national
+gatherings. These three plants they look on as a special gift of heaven.
+According to an old tradition, an American found a handsome young woman
+sitting on a hill,&mdash;who in acknowledging a deep bow, said she came from
+above and at the end of a year would come again to the same hill. She
+was there again at that time, on her right hand Maize, on her left
+Beans, and on her lap Tobacco, and these three she left as a present for
+the American. Before Europeans brought them, there were no other grain
+or vegetables known than maize and beans, but all like the newcomers
+have increased wonderfully. The Spanish historian de Solis is altogether
+wrong in saying that Mexico at the time of the invasion, was a populous
+and mighty state. The Mexicans were savages, without art or knowledge,
+and how could they form a great state? They had neither farming nor
+cattle and could not find food for a large population nor had they any
+means of transportation. The weapons of the savages in North America are
+bows and arrows, and they shoot with the teeth of wild animals. They
+recognize some of the principles of natural law and observe them even
+with their enemies. They scalp usually only the dead,&mdash;then they cut it
+off with a sharp weapon and keep it as a sign of victory. Sometimes the
+victim comes to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span> life,&mdash;some such are in Pennsylvania, for scalping is
+not necessarily mortal. They fight on foot, for they have no horses. The
+savages living in western Pennsylvania were called by the French
+Iroquois. The English call them the Five Nations or the Confederate
+Indians,&mdash;they are united and were so long before the English settled.
+The Mohawks first united with another nation and others joined later.
+Now there are seven altogether so united. They have their regular stated
+meetings and their great council considers the general good. The members
+are known only by their different languages. They are called subjects of
+the King, but they are not subject to British laws, and pay no taxes,
+but the Colonists give them a tribute of presents. Their number does not
+increase. Those living near the Europeans steadily diminish in numbers
+and strength. Their two sexes are of a cold nature,&mdash;the mothers live
+alone at and after the birth of children and during the years they
+suckle them,&mdash;often (owing to the absence of soft food) until their
+young can eat meat. Small pox and rum have played sad havoc among them.</p>
+
+<p>The English settlements in North America have grown much more slowly
+than those in the West Indies, where they came about 1640, and in twenty
+years had flourishing Colonies, such as Barbadoes. In North America the
+Colonists came sixty years before, but at the end of the 17th Century
+were small in number and in exports. This is due to the rich production
+of the Sugar Islands, the absence of Indians, and the contraband trade
+with Spain. The North American Colonies have in the 18th Century greatly
+increased in population and wealth, far beyond the West India Islands.</p>
+
+<p>Franklin in a book published in 1751 showed that the native born
+foreigners double every 25 years, in addition is the steady emigration,
+and some Colonies thus double their population in 18, some in 16, and
+some in 14 years. This will go on as long as there is plenty of farm
+land, and this increases largely with the acquisition of Canada and
+Louisiana. In 1750 there were a million, Douglas<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span> in his book estimated
+that in 1760 there were 1,051,000, besides blacks and soldiers,&mdash;on that
+basis in 1775 there will be 2 millions, and at the close of the 18th
+Century, 4 millions. To attract foreigners, an Act of Parliament granted
+English citizenship to every Protestant after seven years' residence, a
+right that in England can only be obtained with great expense and
+trouble by a special Act of Parliament. The Certificate of the
+Provincial authorities costs only a few shillings and is good through
+all England.</p>
+
+<p>Near the coast and some miles beyond, all the Middle Colonies are
+settled, and new improvements are extending deeper in the interior. In
+Pennsylvania, where the Penn family own all the land, any one who wants
+to improve the land, chooses a piece, pays the landlord for 100 acres 10
+Pound Sterling local money, and binds himself to pay an annual rent of
+half a penny for each acre,&mdash;he then becomes absolute owner, and the
+little ground rent can never be increased. Sometimes the hunter builds a
+wooden hut, and the nearest neighbors in the wilderness help cut the
+timber, build the log hut, fill the crevices with mud, put on the roof
+and put in windows and doors, and in return the owner pays them with a
+gallon of brandy, and by a like good service in turn. Then he lays out
+his garden and pasture and fields, cuts out the underbrush, tops the big
+trees and strips the bark, so that he can sow and reap, the trees die
+and hurt neither land nor crops. Many hunters have thus settled the
+wilderness,&mdash;they are soon followed by poor Scotch or Irish who are
+looking for homes,&mdash;these they find in this half improved
+condition,&mdash;they buy from the hunters, get a patent from the
+Proprietors, paying the usual charge. The hunter moves off into the
+wilderness and goes to work again. The Scotch or Irishman completes the
+half finished task, builds a better house of sawed timber, uses the old
+log hut for a stable, later builds a house of brick and his timber house
+is a good barn. Scotch and Irish often sell to the Germans, of whom from
+90 to 100,000 live in Pennsylvania, and prefer to put all their earnings
+into land<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span> and improvements. The Scotch or Irish are satisfied with a
+fair profit, put the capital into another farm, leaving the Germans
+owners of the old farms. In Pennsylvania there is no law to prevent
+cutting up a farm into very small holdings nor to forbid the purchase of
+very large bodies of land. There is no danger from either course, for
+there is land enough for rich and poor, and the former prefer the larger
+profits from trade to the small return from land. In New England, unlike
+Pennsylvania, a good deal of land is let to farmers, for there are many
+rich owners of large estates,&mdash;this is so too in the Carolinas, and in
+other Colonies where owners of 10 or 20 or more thousands of acres bring
+settlers at their own expense to improve their land. Kalm mentions
+similar cases in New York.</p>
+
+<p>When an owner of land dies intestate, and there are many children to
+inherit the father's farm, it is generally taken by the eldest son, and
+the younger children get in money their share of its appraised
+value,&mdash;the eldest son gets two shares, the other children only one
+apiece. The father of a large family takes from the Proprietary a large
+tract of land, which on his death can be divided among all his children.
+In New England improvement of the land is made in a more regular way
+than in Pennsylvania,&mdash;whole towns are laid out, and as soon as sixty
+families agree to build a church and support a Minister and a
+Schoolmaster, the Provincial government gives them the required
+privilege, carrying with it the right to elect two deputies to the
+Legislature, from the grant of 6 English square miles. Then the town or
+village is laid out in a square, with the church in the centre. The land
+is divided and each works his own, leaving however the forest in common,
+and with the privilege of laying out another village in time. In this
+way new settlements grow in New England in regular order and
+succession,&mdash;every new village touching on an old one, and all steadily
+increasing in wealth and numbers. Nothing of this kind is done in
+Pennsylvania, where the Proprietor wants only to sell land and as much
+as any one wants<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span> and wherever he likes. The mistake of this was shown
+in the Indian wars. On the border were scattered houses and farms, which
+could not help one another, and they were attacked singly, plundered and
+destroyed, and the ruined owners with their families took refuge with
+the older settlements, which became burthened with their care.</p>
+
+<p>Blacks are found in Virginia, Maryland and the two Carolinas in large
+numbers, but very few in Pennsylvania and further north. In
+Pennsylvania, on principle they were prevented coming as much as
+possible, partly because there was no such hard work as they were fitted
+for in raising tobacco, rice and indigo. In Pennsylvania, every negro
+must pay a tax of 10 pounds sterling and this the master who brings him
+must pay. These negroes are protected by law in all the Colonies, as
+much as free men. A Colonist, even if he is the owner, who kills a
+blackman, is instantly sentenced to death,&mdash;if he overworks or ill
+treats his slave, the latter can complain to the judge. Then in their
+own interest the masters are obliged not to give their slaves excessive
+tasks or insufficient food, for their death is a loss. The negro slaves
+have all the general rights of humanity except freedom and property,
+neither of which they possess.</p>
+
+<p>The free in the Colonies are of two kinds, the one servant and maid,
+bound for a half or a whole year, and the term ends by mutual agreement.
+The other class consists of poor Scotch, Irish and Germans, who to get
+to America come without paying their passage, and the ship captain finds
+them a master who pays it and thus secures their service for food and
+lodging and clothing, without pay, but only for a term of years, never
+for life. Sometimes a father sells the services of his children to a
+master, who must teach them some useful trade, farming, carpentering,
+cooking. This lasts until majority,&mdash;with boys at 21, with girls at 18,
+and in some cases for 8 years, but not longer. Then the children are by
+law free, and their master is bound to give them the needful articles
+for house<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>keeping, a cow, farming implements, tools etc. In this way all
+poor children have the hope of establishing themselves on their majority
+in freedom. The poor fathers find their comfort in this expectation, are
+relieved of the care of their children in the interval, and know that
+they are learning something useful and will start out in life with money
+in hand without having to pay anything to the master. The masters in
+turn are satisfied with the cheap service. This law has been introduced
+to cure the old need of servants and apprentices.</p>
+
+<p>There is a special class of servants in the Colonies, between peasants
+and slaves, those transported from Great Britain for certain crimes for
+from 7 to 14 years. It is an exile from Great Britain under penalty of
+prison in case of return. Such an offender is sold by the Courts to a
+Ship's Captain who takes him to the Colonies and sells him as a slave
+for a limited period. That over he is free. Formerly such servants were
+welcomed on account of the demand for laborers, but now they are no
+longer needed in the populous Colonies, they remain worthless and are
+soon sent to prison for fresh offences.</p>
+
+<p>The constitutions of the British Colonies differ according to the
+original grants, 1<sup>st</sup> Royal, 2<sup>nd</sup> Proprietary, 3<sup>rd</sup> Charter Governments,
+and the British Parliamentary Statutes call them Plantations under
+Proprietors, under Charters, under his majesty's immediate commission,
+Stat. 6 Anne, cap. 30, sec. 2. The 1<sup>st</sup> class are arranged strictly
+according to the British Constitution, with a Governor, who represents
+the King, and two legislative branches, 1<sup>st</sup> the Council, called the
+Royal Council, 2<sup>nd</sup> Representatives of towns or counties, belonging to
+one Colony, these two are like the two houses of the British Parliament,
+and the Council is called the Upper House, and the body of
+representatives of the people the Lower House. In these three branches
+are vested the law making powers of the Colony, but subject to the
+Crown, hence united they are called the Assembly, although that is
+popularly limited to the two Houses and often to the Lower<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span> or popular
+House. The King appoints the Governor and recalls him at pleasure. The
+Council also consists of royal officials dependent on the King as to
+terms and nature of appointment, but generally selected from the
+principal persons of the Colony, legal, financial and military officers.
+Governor and Councillors have fixed salaries and certain fees, the
+Governor a large fixed salary, provided in advance by the Colonies, thus
+the Governor of Barbadoes has &pound;2000, the Governor of Virginia &pound;1000. The
+popular representatives are elected annually and receive a fixed per
+diem allowance. They look after the rights and privileges of the people,
+just as do the Council and the Governor after those of the Crown. Every
+measure approved by the three bodies becomes a law, but only
+provisionally, for it must be sent to the King for approval, but if not
+vetoed within three years, it is final. This is the usual rule for
+Colonial governments, (with some local exceptions) in all the West India
+Islands, New York, New Jersey, Virginia, both Carolinas, New Georgia,
+New Scotland, New Hampshire, and I believe Quebec, East and West
+Florida, and the newly acquired Caribbean Islands, and the English
+consider it the best way of securing the rights of the Mother Country,
+that is, Great Britain. The 2<sup>nd</sup> class is that of hereditary
+Proprietors, such as those of Pennsylvania and Maryland. In the former
+the English family of Penn, in the latter the Irish Lords Baltimore are
+the hereditary Proprietors and Governors, as over lords they draw a
+certain income from all the Colonists in proportion to their land, and
+all improved land is sold at a fixed price. Both tax and price are low,
+but the growth of both Colonies has made both families rich. Lord
+Baltimore has the right of patron of all churches in Maryland. As
+hereditary Proprietors both appoint their Lieutenant Governors, who are
+confirmed by the King, and reside in the Provinces. In both Colonies
+there are Assemblies,&mdash;that in Maryland consists of the Council and the
+House of Commons, and subject to the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span> right of the Proprietor, has the
+same jurisdiction as that of any other Colony.</p>
+
+<p>The third kind of government is the Chartered or Free government. This
+is nearest a Democracy, and is less dependent on the Crown. This form of
+constitution exists in the three Colonies of New England, completely in
+Connecticut and Rhode Island,&mdash;in Massachusetts with certain
+restrictions. The two first named Colonies have the right to elect all
+their own officers, including the Governor and Council, and to make all
+needful laws without royal approval, nor can the decisions of their
+Courts be appealed from. In Rhode Island even the ministers of the
+Churches can be removed at the end of a year, so that they hold office
+only for one year's salary.</p>
+
+<p>Massachusetts Bay formerly had these popular rights, but owing to abuses
+their former privileges and freedom were repealed by the King's Bench
+under Charles the Second, and only partly restored by a new Charter from
+William the Third. Since then the King appoints the Governor and the
+chief law and treasury and all military officers. The representatives
+have the right to elect Councillors, but subject to a negative veto of
+the Governor. This election in Massachusetts as well as in Connecticut
+and Rhode Island, is made by both Houses, annually, because the members
+of the Council hold office only for a year.</p>
+
+<p>Laws passed by the Assembly must have royal approval, and in cases
+involving over &pound;300, there is an appeal to the Privy Council in London.</p>
+
+<p>The Governor of Massachusetts has no fixed salary, but it is fixed every
+year by the Assembly. (Kalm says this is so in New York also.) He must
+therefore be popular with the Assembly or the King will replace him by
+another likely to be so. This uncertain tenure is unpopular in Europe
+because it affects unfavorably the interests of the Colony and makes
+that of Great Britain dependent on the Colony. The Colonists answer that
+a fixed salary would enable the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span> Governor to live abroad and send only a
+Lieutenant Governor as substitute.</p>
+
+<p>Pennsylvania has its own Constitution. Penn as Proprietor draws a
+revenue of a half penny sterling local currency for every acre of
+improved land, and every purchaser of wild land can buy a hundred acres
+for &pound;10 and the usual quit rent. As Proprietor he sends a Deputy, whom
+he pays, and appoints all Judges, but ministers are chosen by their own
+congregations in every County. The meeting of the Pennsylvania
+Legislature consists of only one House, (because there is no Council)
+made up of representatives of the various Counties. These are elected
+annually October 1, each County holding its own meetings for the
+purpose,&mdash;every inhabitant worth &pound;50, resident for 12 years, has a
+vote,&mdash;these meetings elect 8 Deputies to the Assembly,&mdash;every elector
+is eligible, but mostly well to do citizens are elected. The County
+gives its representatives six shillings a day, but the Deputies have to
+spend more out of their own pockets. There is no bribery. Every voter
+deposits a written ballot, and the persons who have the highest number
+are declared elected. The purchase of votes would be very unsafe, as the
+voter could always write another name on his ballot. This House with the
+Lieutenant Governor is the law making power. The Governor however
+depends on the Assembly for his salary, as he has no fixed allowance,
+which is voted only from year to year, and if he displeases the
+Assembly, it votes him no salary for the next year. The Assembly has
+been for six years on bad terms with the Proprietor and has made no
+grant for the Governor. The Assembly wants the Proprietor to pay tax on
+his property especially towards the extraordinary war expenses. The
+decision rests with the King in Council, but if the Assembly appealed,
+it would be sent to the King's Bench. The fact that all Judges are
+appointed by the Proprietor, makes difficulties, as he is in his own
+cases both Judge and Plaintiff. The newer Colonies have institutions
+based on Acts of Parliament for New Georgia, New Scot<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>land, &amp;c., but the
+older Colonies have Charters from the King, and not from Parliament.
+These Colonies claim to be subject to the King, but not to Parliament,
+at least not to its arbitrary power, like the newer Colonies, which owe
+their existence to Parliament. The latter are called Plantations within
+his Majesty's Dominions, the former his Majesty's Plantations.</p>
+
+<p>The legal institutions of the Colonies are based on those of England,
+for these are part of the Englishman's rights. All personal relations
+are controlled by Statute Law and Common Law. Roman Law is recognized
+only in Courts of Admiralty. The light of trial by a Jury of twelve men
+is recognized just as in England. It was one of the grounds of complaint
+against the Stamp Act, that questions arising under it were not tried by
+Jury, but by courts specially created.</p>
+
+<p>Most of the Colonists of English descent are Presbyterians. There is not
+one Bishop of the Established Church in America, although there are many
+parishes belonging to it. These are all under the Bishop of London, and
+every one of their clergymen must be examined and ordained in England,
+at a cost of at least &pound;40 to &pound;50, but their stay in England helps their
+education. As the Bishops have spiritual jurisdiction, there are no
+ecclesiastical Courts in the Colonies, and matters pertaining to them
+are settled partly by local Courts, partly by the Assemblies. The
+spiritual Lords may have proposed to send a Bishop to America, but since
+the time of Charles the First, that title has been greatly disliked in
+the Colonies. Catholic Churches are found in Pennsylvania as well as in
+Maryland, in the former because freedom of religion is universal, in the
+latter because the Baltimore family, the Proprietors, were formerly
+Catholics,&mdash;none are found in the other Colonies. There are Jews in
+Pennsylvania and New York,&mdash;in the latter there is a Synagogue, in the
+former only Schools. Pennsylvania is preeminent for the entire religious
+equality or toleration, under which it has increased in population and
+wealth.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span> Roman Catholics are however excluded from all offices and from
+the Assembly, because they cannot take the usual religious oath and
+subscribe under the test act. This oath must be taken here as well as in
+England, as well as that against the Pretender. All other Protestant
+faiths enable the members to hold office. For education in science there
+has long been a high school in Boston, the capital of Massachusetts, and
+there is another founded in 1749 in Philadelphia, the capital of
+Pennsylvania. Franklin proposed and founded it. The money was raised
+partly by subscription, partly by Provincial grants. Most of the
+endowment consists of land, not very productive, but of value hereafter.
+This University has a President with &pound;250 salary, and four
+Professors,&mdash;two with &pound;200, two with &pound;150, besides fees for private
+instruction. There is no College and therefore no lodging built yet. It
+has the right to confer degrees. In 1764 a Medical School was added, and
+it will no doubt have the power to confer degrees. There is no Law
+School yet and it is not likely there will ever be one of Theology. The
+University was chartered by the Assembly for the good of the Colony, but
+as there are so many religious faiths all enjoying perfect equality, it
+is enough if the scholars are taught their religious tenets in their own
+schools with those of their own faith, while Theology is excluded.</p>
+
+<p>Farming, stockraising and fisheries nourish in all the North American
+Colonies, and the forests supply all that is needed for fuel and
+industry. Grapes are successfully cultivated in North America and wild
+grape vines are found in some forests. The cheap wines from Canary
+interfere with the production. Silk can be cultivated and mulberry trees
+grow as far north as New England. Cod fishing is more valuable than a
+silver mine, for it trains up good sailors and helps many industries.
+New England, New Scotland and New Foundland are most largely interested
+in it. Colonists have the same fishing rights in these waters as
+Englishmen. The largest market is Spain and Portugal. These Catholic<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+countries are large consumers, and the fishermen often bless the Pope.</p>
+
+<p>The French fisheries since the recent peace have greatly diminished in
+extent, but the French take a good deal of the trade, as their own
+consumption is supplied by French fishing fleets. The New England
+fishermen supply Portugal, Spain and Italy at a cheaper rate than the
+French.</p>
+
+<p>Whale fishing is increasing, and the Island of Nantucket owns hundreds
+of ships in this industry. It stretches from the mouth of the St.
+Lawrence, on the coast of Greenland, as far south as Florida. Beasts of
+prey do little harm,&mdash;bears and wolves rarely injure men, and bear meat
+is much liked. Deer are plentiful and Buffalo are easily found and can
+be tamed and used as in Asia Minor, Persia, Egypt, Ethiopia and the East
+Indies as draught animals. Kalm praises the Sugar Maple and took some of
+the young trees to Sweden. The sugar can replace that of the West
+Indies, although it has not yet done so. The bounty on Pearl and
+Potashes has made a large industry,&mdash;over a thousand tons are annually
+produced.</p>
+
+<p>Ship building is growing greatly in the North American Colonies. Ships
+are all built of oak, some for use at home, others for sale in England.</p>
+
+<p>Pennsylvania is mainly farming and cattle growing, just as are most of
+the German countries. It has little Fishery trade, as it has a small
+coast, and it has no products that can be used largely in commerce.</p>
+
+<p>The growth of the neighboring Colonies is due to their Fisheries,
+Tobacco, Rice and Indigo. Pennsylvania flourishes on its farming and
+cattle. Horses are raised in some Colonies, but it is better to raise
+oxen, which can be used for twelve years and then killed or sold.</p>
+
+<p>The farmers are industrious and frugal, educate their families, and are
+growing rich in land if not in money.</p>
+
+<p>Manufacturing, wool, flax, iron, steel, and copper, is growing,&mdash;field
+pieces, rifled guns for hunters, and iron cannon are all made in the
+Colonies. England does not in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>terfere with domestic production, but it
+prevents exportation, and does not allow hats to be made, lest the
+English production, although made of American beaver, should be lessened
+in demand in the Colonies. There is little ground for fear of American
+competition, as workmen are few there, and farming is always preferred
+to trades. Farmers are good fathers, and large families help economical
+living. Even if manufacturing increases, it cannot keep pace with the
+increase of population and the demand for goods. In 34 years the
+population of Pennsylvania increased fourfold at most, but the
+importation of English wares increased from &pound;16000 Sterling to
+&pound;268000,&mdash;that is seventeen times greater. In 1725 the value of such
+importations was &pound;16000, in 1757, &pound;268426. Four times the population
+uses much more than four times, really seventeen times more goods,
+because the population grows more rapidly in wealth than in numbers.
+Manufactures must in time be established in the Colonies, because with
+their prosperity likely to increase for centuries to come, England and
+Ireland cannot supply all the wares needed and the Colonies must provide
+them for their future necessities.</p>
+
+<p>The three largest cities are Boston, New York and Philadelphia. In 1720
+the first was as large as the other two together, but since then they
+have grown faster. In New England there are many sea ports, but the only
+ports for New York and Pennsylvania are their two capitals, and they are
+likely to be the largest cities in America. Philadelphia has more than
+3000 houses, and more than 20000 inhabitants. It is regularly laid out
+at right angles, and the streets extend every year.</p>
+
+<p>Virginia has the fewest villages and only one little town, Williamsburg,
+its capital. The population is scattered and every family lives on its
+own tobacco plantation. The Chesapeake and its affluents reach every
+where and the Colonists bring their tobacco by water to the Bay where it
+is loaded on sea going vessels.</p>
+
+<p>New York has great advantages for trading with the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> native Indians, by
+means of the Hudson to Albany, and thence by smaller streams to Oswego
+and Lake Ontario, where the great fairs for dealing with the Indians are
+held. From Lake Ontario there is water way to Lake Superior. The Indians
+bring their skins and hides from the west by water to Oswego, and New
+York excludes traders from Pennsylvania. Philadelphia trades with New
+Jersey over the Delaware River. Salt is imported in 50 or 60 vessels
+from Spanish South America and the Cape Verde Islands and Senegal, where
+it is made from saltwater, by drying in the sun.</p>
+
+<p>The Colonies are greatly restricted in their export trade, yet they have
+their own vessels, but they are not allowed to export their products,
+especially those needed for ship building, such as masts, ship timber,
+iron, copper, hemp, flax, cotton, indigo, tobacco, tar, potash, skins
+and furs,&mdash;they must all be sent to England and sold there for export in
+British ships with British sailors, and where there are English Trading
+Companies, as in the East Indies, the Colonies cannot trade directly. In
+1765 the trade with the Spanish and French West Indies was forbidden,
+but the results were so bad that this restriction was removed. The
+Colonies ship food stuffs to the Portuguese Sugar islands, meal, butter,
+meat, grain, wood and timber for house building etc., and bring back
+Molasses, from which Rum is made. Trade with the Spanish Americas is
+contraband, but the Colonists run the risk for the sake of the hard
+money it brings. Great Britain in 1766 established two free ports in the
+West Indies, one in Jamaica, the other in Dominica, the French have one
+in St. Domingo, the Dutch one in St. Eustache, the Danes one in St.
+Thomas,&mdash;the English want to prevent the contraband trade with Spain,
+but have made the restriction that foreigners can receive all goods free
+of duty, but must sell only for cash, and not in exchange for other
+goods.</p>
+
+<p>Colonial shipping is important through the trade with the Spanish and
+French West Indies, the English Sugar islands,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span> and the fisheries. It
+deals with the regions south of Cape Finisterre, with Africa, the Canary
+and other islands, and in British ships with Portugal, Cadiz, Malaga,
+Marseilles, Leghorn and Naples, and it might deal with Turkey. It
+carries the surplus products of the fisheries, grain, flour, timber,
+sugar and rice. The trade with Portugal is restricted because all its
+wine must be brought by way of England, so only salt as ballast is
+brought back. Sugar is the only cargo which the Colonial shipping can
+carry and sell through Europe. England reserves the right to import and
+reship American products, yet it sells more than three million pounds
+and Ireland and Scotland two million pounds sterling of products in
+America. Hard money is rare in the Colonies, and is higher in price than
+in England. An English shilling is 18 pence colonial, as against 12
+pence in sterling. A Guinea is 34 shillings, on account of its
+convenience for exchange for goods. Spanish pieces of eight, worth in
+England 4 shillings 8 pence, are worth in the Colonies 7 shillings 6
+pence, and gold pistoles have fallen to 27 shillings, because they are
+so often filled with base metal. A credit on London costs 175 p. c.,
+that is 1 English pound sterling 1&frac34; in Provincial currency, but the
+price rises and falls, par is 133&#8531;, but it often goes up to 166&#8532;
+p. c. During the late war par was as low as 125, because England spent
+so much money and so much was brought over by English soldiers,&mdash;and it
+varies in different Colonies. The Colonies have Paper-bills, Bills of
+Credit and Currency, issued by the authority of the Assemblies which
+bind themselves to redeem them,&mdash;from &pound;5 down to 1 shilling, but they
+are not good outside the Province that issues them. It is used to raise
+large amounts for pressing needs, as in the French War to pay the
+soldiers, arm and clothe and feed them in the field. Sometimes the money
+is raised by currency bills which are taken in payment of taxes etc. and
+are cancelled on return to the Treasury office. This was copied from the
+English Exchequer Bills introduced in the reign of William Third by Act
+of Parliament, but the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> English bills carry interest, and those of the
+Colonies do not. Another sort of currency is issued to meet the demand
+for money on loan at interest,&mdash;the current rate is 6 p. c., but these
+loans are made at 5 p. c., and the borrower must pay one tenth of the
+principal annually. Thus the Colony can supply the means of helping
+farmers to buy cattle, agricultural implements etc. and thus improve the
+land. The issues were made too freely in some Colonies, and fell 15 to
+20 p. c. and even more in the market. All the Colonies used paper
+currency, until in some the English government restricted its issue by
+law to a fixed amount. The Mother Country did this to protect its trade
+from suffering loss. Pennsylvania restricted and regulated its issues
+also. The question has been much disputed as to whether such issues are
+advantageous or injurious, but it is still undecided. The taxes in the
+Colonies are very light,&mdash;in Pennsylvania and Virginia there is a tax
+payable in rent at a very low rate to the Proprietor in the former, to
+the Crown in the latter Colony, all other taxes are assessed by
+authority of the Assembly,&mdash;generally a land tax, of 6, 12, 18 pence up
+to 2&frac12; shillings on the pound of rent, and incomes of professions and
+offices are taxed. There are no taxes on exports and imports or excise.
+There is a small light house tax on shipping. The Stamp Tax acts met
+universal opposition,&mdash;the Colonies claimed the right to deal with their
+own finances,&mdash;they had accepted all other Acts of Parliament touching
+their manufactures and trade, limiting their freedom, but these did not
+affect them as much as this direct attack on their purses. The Colonists
+would not admit that Parliament had the right to tax them. They claimed
+to be English citizens, and that no English community could be taxed
+without its own consent, that is through its representatives in the
+House of Commons, but the Colonies have none,&mdash;such as the Scotch
+have,&mdash;but only their own Assemblies,&mdash;there only can taxes be legally
+levied. Their money should be used to pay their own debts, not the
+national debt of Great Britain. The last<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span> war put a heavy debt on all
+the Colonies,&mdash;this ought to be first paid. The Colonies maintained at
+their own expense, 25000 men against the French, costing each Colony
+yearly 20, 30, 50 and more thousands of pounds,&mdash;when this debt is paid,
+the Crown would have the right to require the Colonial Assemblies to
+raise a similar loan. All the Colonies were unanimous on this point, and
+for the first time met through their delegates in a Congress called to
+object to the Stamp Act, and this they did on the right of English
+citizens to petition against any measure they think wrong, and this
+right is ensured to any number, whether it be 2, or 100 or 100000.</p>
+
+<p>There are few fortified places in America. Philadelphia is quite open to
+attack, and has only one Battery on the river, to protect the city
+against invasion. There are a few forts to protect the settlers from the
+Indians. The Provinces have their own militia, maintained at their own
+cost,&mdash;the King appoints the officers. New England has the largest body
+of militia, and the little forts are manned by these troops under the
+King's commanders. There are English regiments in North America
+garrisoning the large forts,&mdash;these are paid by the Crown. The English
+like to serve in America, for they are paid in English sterling and are
+supplied by the local authorities with provisions. The conquest of
+Canada is advantageous alike to the English nation and to the Colonies,
+for much of the expense of maintaining troops and forts is no longer
+required. England supported 25000 men in the Colonies, and the Colonies
+as many more in the last war. The royal rule in America, when in harmony
+with the Colonies, is inexpensive in the older Colonies, for the King's
+Cabinet rules by a stroke of the pen. The Colonies are well pleased that
+France handed New Orleans over to the Spanish. The Indians are sworn
+foes of the Spanish, who are neither so intriguing nor so industrious as
+the French, and hence England can keep on better terms with the Indians.</p>
+
+<p>The general agreement of the Colonies as shown in re<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>lation to the Stamp
+Act, is the more noteworthy, as the Colonies have generally been jealous
+of one another. There are many disputes between them as to their
+borders, rivers, trade etc. If the Colonies were entirely independent,
+they would soon be at war with one another. Only the protection of the
+King and his authority prevents open outbreaks. This jealousy increases
+with the growth of the Colonies. Pennsylvania gets along best, for it
+leaves all trade both import and export open to all other Colonies, only
+making such restriction in its own favor as may be needed to meet
+restrictions laid on its trade by other Colonies, but all laws of this
+kind require the royal approval.</p>
+
+
+<div><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<div class="tn"><b>Transcriber's Note</b>: No changes in text or punctuation were made in this etext</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Achenwall's Observations on North
+America, by Gottfried Achenwall
+
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+</pre>
+
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