Page:Henry Adams' History of the United States Vol. 4.djvu/270

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260
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES
Ch. 11.

force, that no effort should be spared to compass this object."[1]

When permission was asked to establish a packet on Lake Champlain, "I do not think this is a time," replied Jefferson, "for opening new channels of intercourse with Canada and multiplying the means of smuggling."[2] The people who lived on the shores of Lake Champlain might object to such interference in their affairs, but could not deny the force of Jefferson's reasoning. Another application of a different kind was rejected on grounds that seemed to give to the President general supervision over the diet of the people:—

"The declaration of the bakers of New York that their citizens will be dissatisfied, under the present circumstances of their country, to eat bread of the flour of their own State, is equally a libel on the produce and citizens of the State. . . . If this prevails, the next application will be for vessels to go to New York for the pippins of that State, because they are higher flavored than the same species of apples growing in other States."[3]

The same sumptuary rule applied to Louisiana. "You know I have been averse to letting Atlantic flour go to New Orleans merely that they may have the whitest bread possible."[4]

  1. Jefferson to Governor Tompkins, Aug. 15, 1808; Works, v. 343.
  2. Jefferson to the Secretary of the Treasury, Sept. 9, 1808; Works, v. 363.
  3. Jefferson to Gallatin, July 12, 1808; Works, v. 307.
  4. Jefferson to Gallatin, Sept. 9, 1808; Works, v. 363.