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rect course.

We therefore respectfully suggest to you, to take into serious consideration, the propriety of an application to congress, from the manufacturers of the United States, to be heard by counsel, at their bar. The most salutary consequences have resulted from this procedure in Great Britain; and it could not fail to produce consequences equally salutary here; as it must elicit such a mass of information as would destroy the deleterious prejudices, whose operation our country has so much reason to deplore.

There is one point to which we invite your serious attention, as of paramount importance. Notwithstanding the ruin that has overtaken so large a portion of our manufactures and manufacturers, there are some citizens, with immense capitals, engaged in the cotton branch particularly, who deprecate the idea of any further protection, and have impressed on the minds of the constituted authorities, that the present duties are amply adequate. This phenomenon in trade-a renunciation of further aid from government, of which the world has never hither to hada parallel case— must arise from such a pure spirit of patriotism, as would reflect honour on Greece and Rome, in the most brilliant period of their history, or from some motive of a very opposite character. It has been successfully used by the friends of the existing system, as an irresistible argument against the host of petitioners, who have besought additional protection. As it has been thus employed, it becomes a duty to investigate it thoroughly, and ascertain, as far as may be practicable, the source from whence it springs. It is asserted, that the proprietors of those establishments prefer, as the least of two evils, encountering the desultory competition of foreigners, whose goods are often of inferior quality, to the steady and unceasing rivalship of a vast number of their fellow-citizens, who, in the event of a full protection to manufactures, would enter the lists, and divide the market with them. On this delicate point we cannot pretend to decide: we merely present it to view, for public consideration.

INDEX.

Address to the president of the
United States, 78
Address of foreign mechanics

and manufacturers, 144
Agriculture, protection of, 240,

241

America, future policy of, 233,

233

American manufacturers, con-
trast between their situation
and that of the British, 221
American staples, reduction of

21

American manufacturers, diffi-
culties of, 143

Analogy between Portugal and
the United States, 95
Austin, Benjamin, letter of, 134

B

Bacon, lord, infatuation of, 15
Bounties offered by Frederick
II., 52, 55

C

Cambric, great advance in the
price of, 75

Chatham, lord, hostile to Ame-
rican manufactures, 185
Cheese, prices of, 159
Circular letter from a Philadel-
phia committee, 286
Commerce, fully protected, 160
161, 162, 163

Commerce, protection of, 242
Commerce and manufactures,
report of the committee on,
138

Coinmerce, prostrate state of,
156, 157

Congress, remonstrances to, 94.
Contrast between Russia and
the United States, 45, 46, 47
Contrast between Great Britain
and the United States, 41
Contrast between Portugal and
United States, 95

Bounties on manufactures, ef- Contrast between the situation

fects of, 127, 129

British tariff, extracts from, 36
British policy, wisdom of, 39,

40

British mercantile policy, ruin-

ous effects of, 76; 77, 156
British manufacturers, advanta-
ges of, 146

Brougham's opinion on Ameri-

can manufactures, 152
Buy where you can get goods
the cheapest, folly of the max-
im, 18, 19, 22

of the agriculturist, the manu-
facturer, and merchant, 166
Contrast between Prussia and
United States, 52

Cotton manufacture, extent of
the, in Great Britain, 39
Cotton manufacture, immense
gain by, 39

Cotton mill, advantages of, 108,
109
Cotton manufacture in Provi-
dence, 49

1

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Goose with the golden eggs, 156
Grand jury of Newcastle coun-
ty, presentment of, 98

H

Hamilton on manufactures, 101
Hamilton, Alexander, luminous
maxim of, 38
Hamilton, opinion of respecting
manufactures, 158
Hamilton, Alexander, tribute to,

182

Henry IV. of England dying in-
junction of, 193

I

Importations of the U. States,

237

Imports of the United States, ex-
travagant amount of, 231

Industry, decay of, 256
Inspection of manufactured ar-
ticles, 132

Manufacturing establishments
in the United States, 117
Manufactures, salutary effects
of, 120, 121, 122, 145
Manufactures of the U. States
extent of, 179
Manufactures increase the ge-
neral stock of useful labour,
113

Manufactures, progress of in
Europe, 195

Manufactures, objections to, 58
Manufactures erroneously sup-
posed to interfere with com-
merce, 63
Manufactures encouraged by
Frederick II., 52
Manufactures, incipient, disad-
vantages of, 116
Manufacturing labour, produc-
tiveness of, 104

Maxims of political economy,

22

Methuen treaty, consequences
of, 90, 91

Inventions, encouragement of, Monopoly of domestic market,

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Machinery of Great Britain, 198 Oneida memorial, 149
Machinery, advantages of, 106,

107
Manufactures, protection of, es-
sential to national prosperity,
266

P

Pauperism in England, 60, 197
People deficient in industry con-

tribute little to national Smith, Adam, maxims of, 16, 24,
wealth, 192

Philadelphia, distresses of, 254
Pittsburg, calamitous situation
of, 257

Pittsburg memorial, 258
Policy of the United States, dis-
astrous, 230

Political economy, definition of,

21

Political economy of Great Bri-

tain, 32, 33
Political economy, sound max-
ims of, 152

Population of Great Britain, 197
Population of United States, 168
Population and paupers, tables
of, 60, 61, 62
Portugal, case of, 87, 89
Premiums, effects of, 130
Premiums given by Frederick
11, 54, 55

Prohibitions of Edward IV., 34
Prohibitions of Charles II., 35
Prohibitions existing at present,

35

Protection prayed for, 155
Protecting duties, arguments in
favour of, 125

R

Raw materials, exemption of
from duty, 181

Report on the woollen manufac-
ture, 148

Restrictions on importation 27
Restrictions, foreign, on com-
merce, 101

Revenue, loss of, 58, 71
Revenue of Great Britain, 73
Russia, policy of, 44

S

Sermon by rev. Mr. Beecher,261
Silk stuffs manufactured in
Prussia, 52
Smith, Adam, oracle of political
economy, 15

28

Smith's, Adam, maxims, reject-
ed by Great Britain, 153
Smuggling, a plea against pro-

tecting manufactures, 58, 73
Smuggling, remarks on, 236,
250

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Spectator, quotation from, 190
Specie scarce with agricultural
nations, 122, 186
Struggles of Edward III. to es-
tablish manufactures, 152
Steuart, Sir James, opinion of
153
T

Tables of population and pau-
pers, 60, 61, 62

Tariff, American, extracts from,
74

Taylor, John, political economy
of, 37, 157

Tea, duties on, 74, 161
Theories frequently deceptive,

143

Tobacco exported for four years,

203

Tonnage of United States, 164
Trade will regulate itself, absur-
dity of the maxim, 80, 87; ru-
inous effects of, 82

U

United States, calamitous state
of, 21, 78, 93, 96, 200
United States, wretched policy
of, 41, 50

United States, situation of at the
close of the war, 225-present
situation of, 226

V

Vacant lands, objections drawn
from, 58, 65

Votes against adequate protec-
tion of cotton manufactures,
68

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