George Washington Papers

To George Washington from Philadelphia Citizens, 25 July 1795

From Philadelphia Citizens

Philadelphia 25th July 1795.

The Memorial of the Citizens of Philadelphia, the Northern Liberties and District of Southwark, in the State of Pennsylvania,1

Respectfully sheweth.

That your Memorilists, sincerely and affectionately attached to you, from a sense of the important services, which you have rendered to the United States, and a conviction of the purity of the motives, that will forever regulate your public administration, do, on an occasion, in which they feel themselves deeply interested, address you as a Friend and Patriot: as a Friend, who will never take offence at what is well intended; and as a Patriot, who will never reject what may be converted to the good of your Country.

That your Memorialists entertain a proper respect for your constitutional Authority; and whatever may be the issue of the present momentous question, will faithfully acquiesce in the regular exercise of the delegated powers of Government; but, they trust, that in the formation of a compact, which is to operate upon them and upon their posterity, in their most important internal, as well as external, relations; which, in effect, admits another Government to controul the Legislative functions of the Union; and which, if found on experience to be detrimental, can only be repealed by soliciting the assent, or provoking the hostilities, of a Foreign power; you will not deem it improper, or officious, in them, thus anxiously, but respectfully, to present a solemn testimonial of their public opinion, feelings, and interest.

That under these preliminary acknowledgements, of the duty, and of the design, of your Memorialists, the following objections to a ratification of the Treaty lately concluded between Lord Grenville and Mr Jay, are submitted, with implicit confidence, to your consideration.

The Treaty is objected to,

1. Because it does not provide for a fair and effectual settlement of the differences, that previously subsisted, between the United States and Great Britain; inasmuch as it postpones the surrender, and affords no compensation for the detention, of the Western Posts; inasmuch as it cedes, without affording any equivalent, an indefinite extent of territory to the settlers under British titles, within the precincts and jurisdiction of those Posts; inasmuch as it waves a just claim for the value of the Negroes, who were carried off at the close of the war, in violation of positive compact; and inasmuch as it refers all the hopes of indemnity, for the recent spoliations, committed on the commerce of the United States, to an equivocal, expensive, tedious, and uncertain process.2

2. Because by the Treaty the Federal Government accedes to restraints upon the American commerce and navigation, internal as well as external, that embrace no principle of real reciprocity, and are inconsistent with the rights, and destructive of the interests, of an Independent Nation; inasmuch as it unreasonably fetters the intercourse with the West Indies, with India, and with the American Lakes by means of the navigable waters belonging to the British; inasmuch as, in many instances, it circumscribes the navigation of the United States to a particular voyage; and inasmuch as some of our staple commodities (exempted by the Treaties with France, Holland, Prussia and Sweden) it makes liable to confiscation, as contraband; and others, that are exempted by the Law of Nations, it makes liable to seizure, upon payment of an arbitrary price; as articles useful to the enemies of Great Britain.3

3. Because the Treaty is destructive to the domestic Independence and prosperity of the United States; inasmuch as it admits Aliens, professing a foreign allegiance, to the permanent and transmissible rights of property, peculiarly belonging to a Citizen;4 and inasmuch as it enables Great Britain to draw an invidious and dangerous line of circumvallation round the territory of the Union, by her fleets on the Atlantic, and by her settlements from Nova Scotia to the mouth of the Mississippi.

4. Because the Treaty surrenders certain inherent powers of an Independent Government, essential in the circumstances of the United States to their safety and defence; and which might, on great emergencies, be successfully employed to enforce the neglected claims of justice, without making the last dreadful appeal to arms, inasmuch as the right of sequestration; the right of regulating commerce in favor of a friendly, and against a rival power; and the right of suspending a commercial intercourse with an inimical nation, are voluntarily abandoned.5

5. Because the Treaty is an infraction of the rights of Friendship, Gratitude, and Alliance, which the Republic of France may justly claim from the United States; and deprives the United States of the most powerful means, to secure the goodwill and good offices of other nations; inasmuch as it alters, during a war, the relative situation of different nations, advantageously to Great Britain, and prejudicially to France; inasmuch as it is in manifest collision with several Articles of the American Treaty with the French Republic;6 and inasmuch as it grants to Great Britain certain high, dangerous, and exclusive, privileges.

And Your Memorialists, having thus, upon general ground, concisely, but explicitly, avowed their wishes and opinions, and forbearing a minute specification of the many other objections that occur, conclude, with an assurance, that by refusing to ratify the projected Treaty, you will, according to their best information and judgment, evince an exalted attachment to the principles of the Constitution of the United States, and an undiminished zeal to advance the prosperity and happiness of Your Constituents.7

Signed by Order of the General Meeting:
John Barker W. Shippen jr Chairman
Abraham Coats Thos M:Kean
Stephn Girard Chas Pettit
A. J. Dallas Moses Levy.
Blair McClenachan J. Swanwick.
Fredk A. Muhlenberg Wm Coats
Tho. L. Shippen John Hunn8

DS, DLC:GW; LB, DLC:GW.

William Shippen, Jr., enclosed the address and the proceedings of the meeting in a cover letter to GW of 26 July (ALS, DLC:GW; see also Gazette of the United States [Philadelphia], 28 July). GW replied to Shippen on 12 Aug. by enclosing a copy of his letter of 28 July to the Boston selectmen (Philadelphia Gazette & Universal Daily Advertiser, 15 Aug. 1795; see also n.7 below).

1Prior to the meeting, a handbill published in the papers encouraged citizens to gather at 5:00 P.M. on 23 July “to discuss the Momentous Question, viz: Are the People the Legitimate Fountain of Government? There is creeping into your Constitution an insidious SERPENT, whose venom, once infused, will exterminate every remaining Spark of Gratitude and National Faith! Attend! Your rights are invaded! FRANCE, is our avowed Friend; and in the hour of Adversity was our vigorous and undaunted Advocate.—Great-Britain is the universal Foe of Liberty; and you, from your Regeneration to the present moment have been the guiltless victims of her Infernal malice” (Gazette of the United States [Philadelphia], 24 July).

Minutes of that meeting record the resolutions “unanimously adopted” by the citizens:

“First, Resolved, That it is the Constitutional right, and patriotic duty of the Citizens of the United States to express on every important occasion the public sense of public measures.

“Secondly, Resolved, That it is peculiarly the duty of the Citizens to express the public sense upon an Instrument so novel and momentous as the Treaty with Great Britain lately proposed between Lord Grenville & Mr Jay affecting all the political interests & National ties of the United States.

“Thirdly; Resolved, That the Citizens of Philadelphia in judgment and in feelings, dissapprove the Treaty, and are desirous as far as their influence extends to prevent its becoming the supreme Law of the Land.

“Fourthly; Resolved, That the following Citizens shall constitute a Committee to prepare and report a Memorial to the President of the United States, respectfully but forcibly conveying the sentiments of the Citizens of Philadelphia on this important occasion.”

The committee consisted of the fourteen men who signed the address above and Jared Ingersoll. The meeting ended with a resolution to gather again on Saturday, 25 July, to receive and consider the committee report. At the appointed time of 5:00 P.M., attendees “unanimously” voted to accept the address and to have it transmitted “by Express” to GW (D, DLC:GW).

2This paragraph refers to Articles II and VII of the Jay Treaty.

3This paragraph refers to Articles III, XII, XIII, and XVIII of the Jay Treaty and to the treaties of amity and commerce with France (1778), the Netherlands (1782), Sweden (1783), and Prussia (1785).

4This claim comes from Articles II and IX of the Jay Treaty.

5This paragraph refers to articles X and XV.

6The memorialists were referring to the 1778 Treaty of Amity and Commerce.

7The letter-book copy includes the following statement: “The same answer was returned to the foregoing, as to the Selectmen of Boston. August 12th 1795” (see GW to Boston Selectmen, 28 July, and Randolph to GW, 31 July, n.1).

8John Barker (1746–1818), apparently trained as a tailor, also had operated an inn at the sign of St. Tammany on Arch Street.

Abraham Coats (Coates; died c.1804) was a Kensington blacksmith.

Stephen Girard (1750–1831) was a prominent merchant.

Moses Levy (c.1757–1826) worked as a Philadelphia lawyer.

William Coats (Coates; c.1750–1802) worked as a lawyer in the Northern Liberties.

John Hunn (1746–1810) was a sea captain who commanded a merchant ship at the beginning of the Revolution and later engaged in privateering. Hunn attended the Pennsylvania convention to ratify the U.S. Constitution in 1787.

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