I received the Letter your Lordship did me the honour of writing to me the 18th past, and am oblig’d by your kind Congratulations on the Return of Peace, which I hope will be lasting.
With regard to the Terms on which Lands may be acquired in America, and the Manner of beginning new Settlements on them, I cannot give better Information than may be found in a Book lately printed at London, under some such Title as Letters from a Pensilvanian Farmer, by Hector St. John. The only Encouragements we hold out to Strangers, are a good Climate, fertile Soil, wholesome Air, and Water, plenty of Provisions and Fuel, good Pay for Labour, kind Neighbours, good Laws, Liberty, and a hearty Welcome. The rest depends on a Man’s own Industry and Virtue. Lands are cheap, but they must be bought. All Settlements are undertaken at private Expence: The Publick contributes nothing but Defence and Justice. I should not however expect much Emigration from a Country so much drain’d of Men as yours must have been by the late War; since the more have left it, the more Room and the more Encouragement remains for those who staid at home. But this you can best judge of; and I have long observed of your People, that their Sobriety, Frugality, Industry and Honesty, seldom fail of Success in America, and of procuring them a good Establishment among us.
I do not recollect the Circumstance you are pleas’d to mention of my having sav’d a Citizen of St. Andrews, by giving a Turn to his Disorder; and I am curious to know what the Disorder was, and what the Advice I gave which prov’d so salutary. With great Regard I have the honour to be, My Lord, Your Lordship’s most obedient and most humble Servant