Page:Debates in the Several State Conventions, v1.djvu/127

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1784.]
TO REGULATE COALMERCE.
107

And on the question to postpone, for the purpose above mentioned the yeas and nays being required by Mr. Ellery,—

New Hampshire, Mr. Foster, No. No.
Mr. Blanchard, No.
Massachusetts, Mr. Gerry, No. No.
Mr. Partridge, No.
Rhode Island, Mr. Ellery, Ay. Ay.
Mr. Howell, Ay.
Connecticut, Mr. Sherman, No. Divided.
Mr. Wadsworth, Ay.
New York Mr. De Witt, No. No.
Mr. Paine, No.
New Jersey, Mr. Beatty, No. No.
Mr. Dick, No.
Pennsylvania, Mr. Mifflin No. No.
Mr. Montgomery, No.
Maryland, Mr. Stone, No. No.
Mr. Chase, No.
Virginia, Mr. Mercer, No. No.
Mr. Monroe, No.
North Carolina, Mr. Williamson, No. No.
Mr. Spaight, No.
South Carolina, Mr Reed, No.

So it passed in the negative.

The report, being amended, was agreed to as follows:—

"The trust reposed in Congress renders it their duty to be attentive to the conduct of foreign nations, and to prevent or restrain, as far as may be, all such proceedings as might prove injurious to the United States. The situation of commerce at this time claims the attention of the several states, and few objects of greater importance can present themselves to their notice. The fortune of every citizen is interested in the success thereof; for it is the constant source of wealth and incentive to industry; and the value of our produce and our land must ever rise or fall in proportion to the prosperous or adverse state of trade.

"Already has Great Britain adopted regulations destructive of our commerce with her West India Islands. There was reason to expect that measures so unequal, and so little calculated to promote mercantile intercourse, would not be persevered in by an enlightened nation. But these measures are growing into a system. It would be the duty of Congress, as it is their wish, to meet the attempts of Great Britain with similar restrictions on her commerce; but their powers on this head are not explicit, and the propositions made by the legislatures of the several states render it necessary to take the general sense of the Union on this subject.

"Unless the United States in Congress assembled shall be vested with powers competent to the protection of commerce, they can never command reciprocal advantages in trade; and without these, our foreign commerce must decline, and eventually be annihilated. Hence it is necessary that the states should be explicit, and fix on some effectual mode by which foreign commerce not founded on principles of equality may be restrained.

"That the United States may be enabled to secure such terms, they have

"Resolved, That it be, and it hereby is, recommended to the legislatures of the several states, to vest the United States in Congress assembled, for the term of fifteen years, with power to prohibit any goods, wares, or merchandise, from being imported into, or exported from, any of the states, in vessels belonging to, or navigated by, the subjects of any power with whom these states shall not have formed treaties of commerce