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A55056 The present state of New-England impartially considered in a letter to the clergy. Palmer, John, 1650-1700?; F. L. 1689 (1689) Wing P247; ESTC W19307 40,586 47

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and the successive one to Sr. Edmond Andross are both true but that they were illegall is a position a little too confidently asserted by the Penman who seems to be more a Clergy-man than a Lawyer but because the well clearing up of this point will be of great Service to the subsequent Discourse 't will not be amiss that it be throughly considered I shall therefore lay downe this as a certaine Maxime both consonant to Reason the Lawes of the Land That Those Kingdomes Principalities and Colonies which are of the Dominion of the Crowne of England and not of the Empire of the King of England are subject to such Lawes Ordinances and Forms of Government as the Crowne shall think fit to establish That new-New-England and all the Plantations are subject to the Dominion of the Crowne of England and not to the Empire of the King of England Therefore The Crowne of England may Rule and Governe them in such manner as it shall thinke most fit For the proofe of which I shall instance Wales which was once a Kingdome or Territory governed by its owne Lawes but when it became of the Dominion of the Crowne of England either by Submission or Conquest it became subject also to such Lawes as King Edward the first to whome they submitted thought fit to impose as may plainly appeare in the Preamble of the Statute of Rutland Leges et Consuetudines partium illarum hactenus usitatas coram nobis et proceribus Regni Nostri fecimus recitari quibus diligenter auditis et plenius intellectis quasdam illarum de Consilio Procerum predictorum delevimus quasdam permissimus et quasdam correximus et etiam quasdam alias adjiciendas et faciendas decrevimus et eas de caetero in terris Nostris in partibus illis perpetua Firmitate teneri et observari volumus in forma subscripta In English thus We have caused the Lawes and Customs of those parts hitherto used to be recited before Us and the Peers of Our Realme which being diligently heard more fully understood some of them by the Advice of Our Peers aforesaid We have obliterated some We have allowed and some We have corrected and have also decreed that some others shall be made and added to them and We will that for the future they be holden observed in Our Lands in those parts with perpetual firmnesse in manner herein after expressed Then follow the Ordinances appointing Writts originall and judiciall in many things varying from those of England and a particular manner of proceeding And againe in the Close of the said Statute et ideo vobis mandamus quod permissa de caetero in omnibus observaetis ita tantum quod quotiescunque et quandocunque et ●bicunque Nobis placuerit possimus praedicta Statuta et eorum partes singulas declarare interpretari addere sive diminuere pro Nostrae Libi●o voluntatis prout securitati Nostrae et Terrae Nostrae viderimus expediri And therefore We Command you that from hence foreward you observe the premises in all things so onely that as often whensoever and wheresoever We please we may declare interpret add to and diminish from the said Statutes and every part of them according to Our will and pleasure so as We shall see it expedient for the safety of Us and Our Land aforesaid In the Next place I shall instance Ireland That it is a Conquered Kingdome is not doubted Co. Rep. fol. 18. a. but admitted in Calvins Case and by an Act of the 11 th 12 th and 13 th of King James acknowledged in expresse words Viz. Whereas in former times the Conquest of this Realme by His Majesties most Royal Progenitors Kings of England c. That by Virtue of the Conquest it became of the Dominion of the Crowne of England and subject to such Lawes as the Conquerour thought fit to impose untill afterwards by the Charters and Commands of H. the Second King John and H. the 3. they were entituled to the Lawes Franchises of England as by the said Charters Reference being thereunto had may more fully appeare I shall onely instance two The first is out of the close Rolls of H. the 3. Wherein the King after Thanks given to G. de Mariscis Justice of Ireland signifies That Himself and all other his Leiges of Ireland should enjoy the Liberties which he had granted to his Leiges of England and that he will grant confirm the same unto them Claus 1. H. 3. dorso 14 Which afterwards in the 12 th yeare of his Reigne he did as followeth Rex dilecto et sideli suo Richardo de Burgo Justiciar● suo Hibern Salutem Mandavimus vobis firmiter precipientes quatenus certo die loco faciatis venire coram vobis Archiepiscopos Episcopos Abbates Priores Cometes Barones Milites libere Tenentes et Balivos singulorum Comitatuum et coram eis publice legi faciatis Chartam Domini Johannis Regis Patris nostri cui Sigillum suum appensum est quam fieri fecit et jurari a Magnatibus Hiberniae de Legibus et Consuetudinibus Angliae observandis in Hibernia Et precipiatis eis ex parte Nostra quod Leges illas Consuetudines in Charta praedicta contentas de caetero firmiter teneant et observent The King to His faithfull and beloved Richard de Burg Justice of Ireland Greeting We have Commanded you firmly injoining you that on a certain day and place you make to come before you the Archbishops Bishops Abbots Priors Earles Barons Knights Free-Holders and the Baylifs of every County and before them you cause to be publickly read the Charter of the Lord King John our Father to which His Seal is affixed and which He caused to be made and sworne to by the Nobility of Ireland concerning the Lawes and Customs of England to be observed in Ireland And command them on Our behalfe that for the future they firmly keep and observe those Laws and Customs conteined in the Charter aforesaid By all which it is evident that after the Conquest and before the recited Charters the Inhabitants there altho' composed of many free-borne English Subjects who settled themselves among them were neither govern'd by theire owne Laws nor the Laws of England but according to the good pleasure of the Conqueror and if you will take the opinion of Sr. Edward Cooke in his Annotations on the Great Charter he tells you plainly That at the makeing thereof it did not extend to Ireland or any of the King 's forreigne Dominions but after the making of Poynings Law which was in the 11 th yeare of H. the 7 th long after the Great Charter it did Extend to Ireland I have onely one Instance more and that is the Vsage of forreigne Nations in theire Plantations and Settlements abroad The Government of the Vnited Provinces Denmarke are well knowne in Europe and yet in all theire Plantations their Governments are
despoticall and absolute all the power is in the hands of a Governour Councill and every thing is ordered and appointed by them as is well knowne to those that are acquainted with Batavia Surinam Curasao New-Yorke when formerly in their hands and the Island of St. Thomas By which it is it evident that Those Kingdoms and Principalities which are of the Dominion of the Crowne of England are subject to such Laws Ordinances and Methods of Government as that Crowne shall think sit to establish The next thing then to be proved is That new-New-England and all the English Colonies are subject to the Dominion of the Crowne of England as Wales and Ireland are and not to the Empire of the King of England as Scotland is 'T is a Fundamentall Point consented unto by all Christian Nations that the First Discovery of a Countrey inhabited by Insidells gives a Right and Dominion of that Countrey to the Prince in whose Service and Employment the Discoverers were sent Thus the Spaniard claimes the West-Indies the Portungals Brasile and thus the English these Northern parts of America for Sebastian Cabott imployed by King H. the 7 th was the first Discoverer of these parts and in his name took possession which his Royall Successours have held and continued ever since therefore they are of the Dominion of the Crowne of England and as such they are accounted by that excellent Lawyer Sr. John Vaughan in his Reports Vaugh. Rep. Craw versus Ramsey which being granted the Conclusion must necessarily be good and it will follow That Englishmen permitted to be transported into the Plantations for thither without the Kings Licence we cannot come can pretend to no other Liberties Priviledes or Immunities there than anciently the subejcts of England who removed themselves into Ireland could have done For 't is from the Grace and Favour of the Crowne alone that all these flow and are dispensed at the pleasure of him that sits on the Throne which is plaine in the Great Charter it-selfe where after the Liberties therein granted by the King it concludes thus tenendas habendas de Nobis Haeredibus Nostris in perpetuum To HAVE and to HOLD of Us and Our Heires for ever which by the learned Sr. Edward Cooke is thus explained These Words saith he are not inserted to make a legall Tenure of the King but to intimate that all Liberties at first were derived from the Crowne Instit Pag. 2. Fol. 4. Barbadoes Jamaica the Leeward-Islands Virginia have their Assemblies but it is not sui Juris 't is from the Grace Favour of the Crowne signified by Letters Patents under the broad Seale But these Assemblies have not power to enforce any Act by them made above one year the King haveing in all the Consessions granted them reserved unto Himselfe the Annulling or Continuance of what Laws they make according to His pleasure New-England had a Charter but no one will be so stupid to imagine that the King was bound to grant it us Neither can we without impeaching the prudent Conduct and discretion of our Fore-Fathers so much as think they would put themselves to so vast an expence and unnecessary Trouble to Obtain that which as Englishmen they thought themselves to have a sufficient right to before We owe it onely to the Grace and Favour of our Soveraigne and if we had made beter use of it to promote the Ends for which it was granted the weight of those Afflictions under which we now groan would not have laine so heavy upon us at least we should have less deserved them Besides The Parliament of England have never by any Act of theirs favoured the Plantations or declared or enlarged their Priviledges but have all along plainly demonstrated that they were much differenced from England and not to have those Priviledges and Liberties which England enjoyed being in all Acts relateing to the Plantations Restrained and burthened beyond any in England as appears by the several Acts made for the Encreasing of Navigation and for Regulating and securing the Plantation Trade I think I have both by good Authority Practice Precedent made it plaine that the Plantations are of the Dominion of the Crown of England and without any Regard to Magna Charta may be Ruled and Governed by such wayes and methods as the Person who wears that Crowne for the good and advancement of those Settlements shall think most proper and convenient Therefore Neither the Commission to the President nor that to Sr. Edmond A●dros can be said to be illegall Since then such an one might lawfully be granted we have grea● reason to commend the Moderation of the Gentleman who was entrusted with it and so returne thanks to Almighty God for placeing over us a person endued with that prudence Integrity that he was so for from exceeding his Commission that he never put in execution the powers therein granted him Have there been any Taxes laid upon us but such as were settled by Laws of our owne makeing any part whereof might be retained in force after the Condemnation of our Charter that the King thought ●it Who hath been Transferr'd out of this Territory Or did we ever pay fewer Rates than we have done under him And whereas it is also Alledged in the Declaration that there were Courses taken to damp and spoile the Trade c. the same is altogether Mistaken unlesse by that is meant the irregular Trade used heretofore with Forreigners and Privateers contrary to the Acts of Navigation the Laws of the Land For the very considerable Advance of His Majesties Revenue ariseing by Customs doth sufficiently demonstrate that the lawfull Trade of this Territory was very much encreased under the Government of Sr. Edmond Andros 4. 'T will be but time lost to say any thing of the Red-Coats for no man can be so void of Sence and Reason to think that so many Thousand men which at this day inhabit this Colony could be imposed upon by one hundred Red-Goats and if any body hath been so vain as to threaten us with more I look upon it an effect of Passion or Folly for Experience which certainly is the most convinceing Argument in the world tells us there is no such thing and Haters of the People I must confesse I cannot easily comprehend unless to inhabit fourteen or fifteen years within the Territory will make a man such Is their any one Gentleman of the Councill that hath either been displaced or put into that station by the Authority here Which of our Judges are strangers Were not Three of them brought up amongst us and of our owne Communion and was not the other in the same Imployment in some part of this Territority at the time of the Annexation From whome had the Secretary and Collector his Commission certainly from no body here Did the Alteration of the Government change our Treasurer Is it not the same Sr. Edmond found here Is he not a man of