The Fisheries Dispute; a Suggestion for Its Adjustment By Abrogating the Convention of 1818, And Resting On the Rights And Liberties Defined in the Treaty of 1783; a Letter to the Honourable William M. Evarts, of the United States Senate
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The British government revived the pretence after the conclusion of the Treaty, and the Canadian government presently began to warn and harass our fishermen, and some fishing-vessels were captured. 38 THE FISHERIES DISPUTE. On March 3, 1815, John Adams wrote a letter of shigu- lar vigor to WilUam Cranch from Ouincy. He says : Our fisheries have not been abandoned. They cannot be aban- doned. They shall not be abandoned. We hold them by no grant, gift, bargain, sale, or last will and testament, ...nor by hereditary descent from Great Britain. We hold them in truth not as kings and priests claim their rights and power, by hypocrisy and craft, but from God and our own swords. . . . We have all the rights and liberties of Englishmen in the fisheries in as full and ample a manner as we had before the Revolution ; we have never forfeited, surrendered, alienated or lost any one punctilio of those rights and liberties ; on the contrary, we compelled the British nation to acknowledge them in the most sol- emn manner in the Treaty of Peace of 1783.
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