|
"There hasn't been a
single piece of law that has been passed that doesn't
take the charter into account"
Bob Rae - former Ontario
premier |
|
| |
Documents in History - A Primary View
|
|
| |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
 |
|
Canadahistory.com |
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
1750 October Memoir on the English Aggression
The restoration of peace has in no wise diverted the
English from their constant design to get possession of
all the commerce of America. It is only necessary to
consider their actual conduct to be convinced of this
truth. No doubt Spain has good proof on its side.
France's is but too certain, both from the publicly
professed plans of the English and from the difficulties
their commissaries are daily making in the settlement of
the disputes of the two nations in America. England, not
content with having already encroached on the lands of
France on the side of Hudson Bay, and with pushing its
settlements in Acadia on the mainland of New France at
the Bay of Fundy, despite the boundaries assigned that
country by the Treaty of Utrecht, now plans the invasion
of Florida and Louisiana. It is true the English have
already encroached on those provinces, but they have not
hitherto pushed their claims to the extravagant extent
revealed by the map just published at London, on which,
under pretence of correcting one of our recent
geographers, they extend their boundaries into Spanish
Florida in such fashion as to seat themselves on waters
flowing into the Gulf of Mexico. As to Louisiana, they
claim to extend their boundaries over all the lands of
the Indians friendly to France as far as the Alabamas;
they partially recompense Spain for what they took from
Florida at the expense of Louisiana. Although this map
is not made by express order of the government, it is
well known to be by authority. However there is no doubt
that the English have no justification for such
enterprises which have long been no secret. They wish to
be in a position to invade Florida, and by that
conquest, along with their possession of the Isle of
Providence in the Bahamas, to make themselves masters of
the outlet of the Bahama Channel, and as a result of the
treasure of Europe. To carry out this plan more easily
they seek to put it out of the power of the French of
Louisiana to give aid to the Spanish as formerly, and as
they will never fail to do in all attempts of the
English to work their hurt. In this they can best
succeed by seeking to cut the communication of the
French of Louisiana with New France and Florida; but is
not the common danger resulting to France and Spain a
warning to the two powers to concert measures as soon as
possible that will insure the failure of this pernicious
design? The king on his side is ready to enter into all
the measures His Catholic Majesty may think most proper
to protect himself from the ambitious projects of a
nation with no other aim than to subjugate all the
others by seizing on their colonies and their commerce,
and which terms that the "balance of Europe."
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Travel |
 |
|
The History Club |
|
Sign up for a complimentary membership
in our history e-publication TIMELINES and receive a
monthly issue of Timelines magazine.
Join
To contact regarding information on this
site or to submit articles for web publication,
please click here |
|