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Colonial and State Records of North Carolina
Articles from the Cape Fear Mercury
No Author
August 11, 1775
Volume 10, Pages 152-157

[B. P. R. O. Am. & W. Ind. Vol. 222.]
Extracts from the Cape Fear Mercury of 11th August, 1775.

About three weeks ago Governor Martin called a Council, but a few days prior to their meeting, he wrote a letter to the honble Mr Dry, suspended him from that Board, without giving him the least opportunity for justifying himself.

We are told this suspension was occasioned by Mr Dry maintaining his usual connections and intercourse with some of his friends, who have declared in favour of American Liberty. A suspension of this sort will be deemed by all good men, much more honourable than an appointment to the Council.

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At an election of Delegates on the eighth inst. for the Town of Wilmington and the County of New-Hanover on the recommendation of Samuel Johnston Esq., moderator, Archibald Maclaine Esq for the town, William Hooper, James Moore and Alexander Lillington Esqrs for the County, were chosen additional Delegates to represent this Town and County in general Convention to be held at Hillsborough on the 20th instant, with Cornelius Harnett Esq.

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for the town, and George Moore, John Ashe and Samuel Ashe Esqres chosen at a former Election for the County.

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The Revd Mr Reed of Newbern, refused to preach on the general fast day, tho' particularly applied to for that purpose, which so offended his parishioners, that we hear, they have dismissed him from his parochial charge there.

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Letter from General Lee, to General Burgoyne upon his arrival in Boston.

Philadelphia, June 7th 1775.

My Dear Sir,

We have had twenty different accounts of your arrival in Boston, which have been as regularly contradicted the next morning; but as I now find it certain that you are arrived, I shall not delay a single instant addressing myself to you. It is a duty I owe to the friendship I have long and sincerely professed to you: a friendship to which you have the strongest claims from the first moments of our acquaintance. There is no man from whom I have received so many testimonies of esteem and affection; there is no man whose esteem and affection could, in my opinion, have done me greater honour. I entreat and conjure you therefore, my dear Sir, to impute these lines not to a petulent itch of scribbling, but to the most unfeigned solicitude for the future tranquility of your mind, and for your reputation. I sincerely lament the infatuation of the times, when men of such a stamp as Mr Burgoyne and Mr Howe can be induced into so impious and nefarious a service by the artifice of a wicked and insidious court and Cabinet. You, Sir, must be sensible that these epithets are not unjustly severe. You have yourself experienced the wickedness and treachery of this Court and Cabinet.

You cannot but recollect their manœuvres in your own select Committee, and the treatment yourself, as President, received from these abandoned men. You cannot but recollect the black business of St Vincent, by an opposition to which you acquired the highest and most deserved honour. I shall not trouble you with my opinion of the right of taxing America without her own consent, as I am afraid, from what I have seen of your speeches, that you have already formed your creed upon this Article; but I will boldly affirm, had

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this right been established by a thousand statutes, had America admitted it from time immemorial, it would be the duty of every good Englishman to exert his utmost to divest Parliament of this right, as it must inevitably work the destruction of the whole Empire. The malady under which the State labors is indisputably derived from the inadequate representation of the subject, and the vast pecuniary influence of the Crown. To add to this pecuniary influence and incompetency of representation, is to insure and precipitate our destruction. To wish any addition can scarcely enter the heart of a citizen who has the least spark of public virtue, and who is, at the same time, capable of seeing consequences the most immediate. I appeal, Sir, to your own conscience, to your experience and knowledge of our Court and Parliament; and I request you to lay your hand upon your heart, and then answer with your usual integrity and frankness, whether, on the supposition America should be abject enough to submit to the terms imposed, you think a single guinea raised upon her would be applied to the purpose, as it is ostentatiously held out to deceive the People at home, of easing the Mother Country? or whether you are not convinced, that the whole they could extract would be applied solely to heap up still further the enormous fund for corruption, which the Crown already possesses, and of which a most diabolical use is made.

On these principles I say, Sir, every good Englishman, abstracted of all regard for America, must oppose her being taxed by the British Parliament; for my part I am convinced that no argument, not totally abhorrent from the spirit of liberty and the British Constitution, can be produced in support of this right. But it would be impertinent to trouble you upon a subject which has been so amply, and, in my opinion, so fully discussed. I find a speech given as yours in the public papers, that it was by the King's positive command you embarked in this service. I am somewhat pleased that it is not an office of your own seeking, though, at the same time, I must confess, that it is very alarming to every virtuous citizen, when he sees men of sense and integrity, because of a certain profession, lay it down as a rule, implicitly to obey the mandates of a court be they ever so flagitious. It furnishes, in my opinion, the best arguments for the total reduction of the army. But I am running into a tedious essay, whereas I ought to confine myself to the main design and purpose of this letter, which is to guard you and your Colleagues, from those prejudices, which the same miscreants, who

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have infatuated General Gage and still surround him, will labour to instil into you against a brave, loyal and most deserving people. The avenues of truth will be shut up to you. I assert Sir, that even General Gage will deceive you as he has deceived himself; I do not say he will do it designedly. I do not think him capable but his mind is totally poisoned, and his understanding so totally blinded by the society of fools and knaves that he no longer is capable of discerning facts as manifest as the noonday sun. I assert Sir, that he is ignorant, that he has been from the beginning consummately ignorant of the principles, temper, disposition and force of the Colonies. I assert Sir, that his letters to the ministry, at least such as the public have seen, are one continued tissue of misrepresentation, injustice and tortured inferences from misstated facts. I affirm, Sir, that he has taken no pains to inform himself of the truth; that he has never conversed with a man who has had the courage or honesty to tell him the truth. I am apprehensive that you and your Colleagues may fall into the same trap, and it is the apprehension that you may be inconsiderately hurried, by the vigour and activity you possess, into measures which may be fatal to many innocent individuals, may hereafter wound your own feelings and which cannot possibly serve the cause of those who sent you, that has prompted me to address these lines to you. I most devotedly wish that your industry, valour, and military talents, may be reserved for a more honourable and virtuous service against the natural enemies of your Country, to whom our court are so basely complacent, and not be wasted in ineffectual attempts to reduce to the wretchedest state of servitude, the most meritorious part of your fellow subjects. I say Sir, that any attempts to accomplish this purpose must be ineffectual. You cannot possibly succeed. No man is better acquainted with the state of this continent than myself. I have ran through almost the whole Colonies, from the North to the South, and from the South to the North. I have conversed with all Orders of men, from the first estated Gentleman to the lowest Planters and Farmers, and can assure you that the same spirit animates the whole.

Not less than an hundred and fifty thousand gentlemen, yeomen and farmers are now in arms, determined to preserve their liberties or perish. As to the idea that the Americans are deficient in courage, it is too ridiculous and glaringly false to deserve a serious refutation. I never could conceive upon what this notion was

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founded. I served several campaigns in America the last war and cannot recollect a single instance of ill behaviour in the Provincials, where the Regulars acquitted themselves well. Indeed we well remember some instances of the reverse, particularly where the late Colonel Grant, he who lately pledged himself for the general cowardice of America, ran away with a large body of his own regiment, and was saved from destruction, by the valour of a few Virginians. Such preposterous arguments are only proper for the Rigbys and Sandwichs, from whose mouths never issued, and to whose breasts truth and decency are utter strangers. You will much oblige me in communicating this letter to General Howe, to whom I could wish it should be considered in some measure addressed as well as to yourself. Mr Howe is a man for whom I have ever had the highest love and reverence. I have honoured him for his own connections, but above all for his admirable talents and good qualities. I have courted his acquaintance and friendship not only as a pleasure but as an ornament; I flatter myself that I had obtained it. Gracious God! Is it possible that Mr Howe should be prevailed upon to accept such an Office! That the brother of him to whose memory the much injured people of Boston, erected a monument should be employed as one of the instruments of their destruction. But the fashion of the times it seems is such, as renders it impossible he should avoid it.

The commands of our most gracious Sovereign are to cancel all moral obligations, to sanctify every action, even those that the satrap of an Eastern despot would start at. I shall now beg leave to say a few words with respect to myself and the part I act. I was bred up from my infancy with the highest veneration for the liberties of mankind in general. What I have seen of Courts & Princes convinces me that Power cannot be lodged in worse hands than in theirs; and of all Courts I am persuaded that ours is the most corrupt, and hostile to the rights of humanity. I am convinced that a regular plan has been laid, indeed every act since the present accession evinces it, to abolish even the shadow of liberty from amongst us. It was not the demolition of the tea, it was not any other particular Act of the Bostonians, or of the other provinces which constituted their crimes. But it is the noble spirit of liberty manifestly pervading the whole continent, which has rendered them the objects of Ministerial and Royal vengeance. Had they been notoriously of another disposition, had they been homines ad servituduiem parati,

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they might have made as free with the property of the East India Company as the felonious North himself with impunity. But the Lords of St Tames's and their mercenaries of St Stephen's, well know, that as long as the free spirit of this great Continent remains unsubdued, the progress they can make in their schemes of universal despotism will be but trifling. Hence it is that they wage inexpiable war against America. In short this is the last asylum of persecuted liberty. Here should the machinations and fury of her enemies prevail, that bright Goddess must fly off the face of the earth and leave not a trace behind. These, Sir, are my principles; this is my persuasion and consequentially I am determined to act.

I have now, Sir, only to entreat that whatever measures you pursue, whether those which your real friends, myself amongst them, would wish, or unfortunately those which our accursed misrulers shall dictate, you will still believe me to be personally, with the greatest sincerity and affection

Yours, &c.,
CHARLES LEE.