The State of the Trade with the Northern Colonies
Printed in The London Chronicle, November 1-3, 1768.
To the Printer of the London Chronicle.   Sir,

At a time when our disputes with America make the topic of much conversation, it may be agreeable to your Readers to have a clear view of the present state of our trade to and from the Northern Colonies. Such I now send you, being an extract from the Custom House books, (by which that trade from England only, exclusive of Scotland, appears to be far above Two Millions a year) with some remarks made thereon by a judicious Merchant of my acquaintance, who gives reasons for adding another Million to the computation. Our trade with the Southern Colonies, or West India Island, is not included in this account.

The political Reader will make his own reflections on the prudence of our quarrelling with such customers, about an impracticable right of taxing them, when by long experience we have found them ready to give voluntarily, upon requisitions by the Crown, more than we propose to extort from them. I shall only remark, that the greatest part of our manufactures sent them, are superfluities and modes, which they use and follow, because they are the modes of a respected country; and the rest, though more necessary, are such as they can make themselves. If we proceed in measures that must in time make us odious to them, a trade of this kind must fall of course. And as the bulk of the value of our manufactures arises from the value of the provision consumed by our manufacturers while employed in working them, which provision is the produce of the land, and bears a higher price always in manufacturing countries in proportion as the consumer can be better paid for his labour; and as the value of lands depends greatly on the price for which its produce can be sold; this dispute appears to me equally important to the landed as to the trading and manufacturing interests. Unwise men are often most obstinate when they are most in the wrong. Wise men think it no impeachment of their wisdom, or diminution of their honour, when they find they have been mistaken or misled, to rectify what they have done amiss, and change their conduct. This might have been urged to the last Parliament if they had still continued. But we are now in a better situation in that respect: We have a new Parliament, which is a new being, not accountable for the actions of its predecessor, and may therefore more freely take them into consideration. I pray devoutly that their deliberations may, by God’s good providence, be directed to such healing measures, as will be effectual, in strengthening this Empire by a cordial union of its parts, and disappointing the at present highly-rais’d hopes and expectations of our national enemies. The Americans are our brethren. Let us not grudge them the enjoyment of the rights, liberties and privileges that belong to them as Englishmen, or which they have so dearly purchased. Ours are not the less, any more than my sunshine is diminished by what enters the windows of my neighbour. I am, Sir your humble servant,

F.B.

Exports to the Continent of America from England only, exclusive of Scotland.
1761 1762 1763 1764 1765
Canada 148,478 4 2 149,539 16 4 251,385 12 6 213,509 14 9 366,573 4 11
Carolina 194,170 14 11 250,132 2 0 305,808 1 6 334,709 11 8 296,732 1 4
Florida 9,946 3 2 15,004 15 7 19,888 9 8 38,718 14 10
Georgia 23,761 8 10 44,908 19 9 18,338 2 11 29,165 16 9 67,268 5 5
Hudson’s Bay 4,122 2 9 4,393 2 7 3,892 11 2 4,394 5 5 4,631 6 3
New England 247,385 18 3 258,854 19 6 459,764 0 11 451,299 14 7 409,642 7 6
New York 288,046 16 10 238,560 2 1 515,416 12 1 382,341 11 1 330,829 15 8
Nova Scotia 25,071 2 4 16,303 13 4 15,434 17 0 48,211 19 8 14,181 6 5
Pennsylvania 206,199 18 8 284,152 16 0 435,191 14 0 363,368 17 5 327,314 5 3
Virginia and
 Maryland 417,599 15 6 555,391 12 10 515,192 10 6 383,224 13 0 372,548 16 1
1761 amounts to 1,554,836 2 3 1,812,082 17 7 2,535,429 18 2 2,230,022 15 0 2,228,450 3 8
1762 " " 1,812,082 17 7
1763 " " 2,535,429 18 2
1764 " " 2,230,022 15 0
1765 " " 2,228,450 3 8
£.10,360,821 16 8 ,

which is £2,072,164 7s. 4d. per annum on a medium of those 5 years by the Custom-House entries and valuation. But as the New York Merchants proved to their General Assembly in 1764, from original invoices from Great Britain, that for the three preceding years they had imported what they were charged £1,500,000 for, while the above Custom-House account for those 3 years makes it no more than £1,042,023 11s. 0d. and as the Merchants of Pennsylvania at the same time and on the same occasion [for repealing the Stamp Act] proved their imports from Great Britain for said 3 years to be about £1,500,000 also, when the above account of exports makes it no more than £925,544 8s. 8d. we may fairly conclude the exports to said American Colonies was full £3,000,000 per ann. during the above 5 years.

This difference between the London Custom-House account, and those of the Merchants of New York and Pennsylvania, is owing in a great measure to the Scotch Exports being in the latter and not in the former account, which is confined to England only; to the Custom-House of London account still adhering to the same valuation of goods that was made soon after the Revolution, at which time it began to be preserved; whereas many of them are one third dearer now than they were then; to the premium of Insurance, Factors Commissions, and all other charges attending the packing, shipping, &c. being in the Merchants account, and not in that of the Custom-House; and to erroneous entries made by the Factors in England, they being left to enter more or less, just as they please, of goods they ship not subject to any duty or drawback upon exportation; so that the London Custom-House account serves no other purposes than to shew the sort of goods exported to or imported from every country; and as it is kept upon the same principles or estimates as at the time it commenced, to shew whether your Exports and Imports encrease or decrease upon the whole trade, or to any country in particular.

Imports from the Continent of America to England only, exclusive of Scotland.
1761 1762 1763 1764 1765
Canada 32,079 9 6 26,856 13 5 44,669 9 5 39,034 4 2 46,982 12 3
Carolina 181,695 10 3 282,366 3 6 341,727 12 7 385,918 12 0 293,587 7 8
Florida 294 3 4 684 8 4 2,113 7 7
Georgia 6,522 17 7 14,469 18 4 31,325 9 4 34,183 15 8 53,074 16 7
Hudson's Bay 12,119 14 5 8,567 10 1 9,272 9 2 10,654 10 1 10,199 17 6
New England 41,733 17 6 74,815 1 1 88,157 1 9 145,819 0 1 141,733 4 11
New York 58,882 6 5 53,988 14 4 53,697 10 4 54,959 18 2 67,020 11 8
Nova Scotia 1,144 6 5 4,312 9 10 32 19 3 164 2 1 1,433 9 4
Pennsylvania 38,091 2 2 38,228 10 2 36,258 18 1 25,148 10 10 26,851 3 1
Virginia and
 Maryland 415,709 10 9 642,294 2 9 559,408 15 1 505,671 9 9 461,693 9 4
1761 amounts to 787,978 15 0 1,145,899 3 6 1,164,844 8 6 1,202,238 11 2 1,104,689 19 11
1762 " " 1,145,899 3 6
1763 " " 1,164,844 8 6
1764 " " 1,202,238 11 2
1765 " " 1,104,689 19 11
£.5,405,650 18 1 ,

which is £1,081,130 3s. 7d ½ per annum on a medium of those five years, by the Custom-House entries of England only, which are exact as to the quantity and sorts of goods, as they all are subject to duties or bounties; but, like the exports, the value of them is estimated upon the rule laid down at the commencement of the Custom-House Ledger of London: which as to naval stores, indigo, dyeing wood, tobacco, &c &c. must be greatly too high, and for beavers and furs of all kinds, and the oil of fish, much too low for the prices those articles bear now, compared with what they did in those days. Thus, upon the face of the Exports and Imports to those colonies, into and from England only, according to these Custom-House accounts, they have an annual balance of near a million against them. And if upon the whole, some being too low and other articles too high, the account of the value of the import is near what it sells for, and the Merchants accounts of the Imports from Great Britain into Pennsylvania and New-York are just, of which there can be no doubt, they being taken from original invoices, and we follow the like proportionate rule for the other colonies, compared with the London Custom-House account, the northern colonies have then an annual ballance against them, upon a medium of those five years, of about two millions of pounds, besides what it may be in Scotland; which they endeavour to pay in ships they sell here, by freights their ships make from the West Indies to Great Britain, by the profit of their circuitous trade with foreign colonies; with Spain, Portugal, Italy, and Africa, from whence come their remittances in silver, gold, bills of exchange, dying wood, &c. But as all their methods of remittance fall short of a sufficiency to make ready pay for the amount of their demand from Great Britain, they are therefore constantly in debt to her, and that too very largely: but for that debt, after six or nine months, they pay by agreement and the custom of the trade, legal interest, which increases the balance against them, so that besides the profits of our trade with them, large sums are drawn from them annually as interest only.

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