The declaration, of the gentlemen, merchants, and inhabitants of Boston, and the countrey adjacent. April 18th. 1689.
Mather, Cotton, 1663-1728., Mather, Increase, 1639-1723.
   
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THE Declaration, Of the Gentlemen, Merchants, and Inhabitants of BOSTON, and the Countrey Adjacent. April 18th. 1689.

WEE have seen more than a decad of years rolled away, since the English World had the Disco|very of an horrid Po|pish Plot; wherein the bloody 〈◊〉 of Rome had in their Design and Prospect no less than the extinction of the Protestant Religion: which mighty Work they called the utter subduing of a Pestilent Heresie: wherein (they said) there never were such hopes of Success since the Death of Queen Mary as now in our dayes. And we were of all Men the most insensible, if we should apprehend a Countrey so remarkable for the true Profession and pure Exercise of the Protestant Religion as New-England is, wholly unconcerned in the Infandous Plot, to crush and break a Countrey so intirely and signally made up of Reformed Churches, and at length to involve it in the miseries of an utter Extirpa|tion: must needs carry even a Supererogation of merit with it, among such as were intoxi|cated with a Bigotry inspired into them by the great Scarlet Whore.

§ II. To get us within the reach of the de|solation desired for us, it was no improper thing that we should first have our Charter Va|cated and the hedge which kept us from the wild Beasts of the field effectually broken down. The accomplishment of this was hastned by the unwearied solicitations and slanderous accusati|ons of a man for his Malice and Fals-hood well known unto us all.

Our Charter was with a most injurious pre|tence (& scarce that) of Law, Condemned before it was possible for us to appear at Westminster in the legal defence of it: and without a fair leave to answer for our selves concerning the crimes falsly laid to our charge, we were put under a President and Councill, without any liberty for an Assembly which the other American Planta|tions have, by a Commission from his Majesty.

§ III. The Commission was as Illegal for the forme of it, as the way of obtaining it was Ma|licious and unreasonable: yet we made no re|sistance thereunto as wee could easily have done; but chose to give all Man-kind a demonstration of out being a people sufficiently dutifull and loyall to our King: and this with yet more Sa|tisfaction because wee took pains to make our selves believe as much as ever we could of the Whedle then offer'd unto us; That his Majestys desire was no other then the happy encrease & advance of these Provinces by their more imme|diate dependance on the Crown of England. And we were convinced of it by the courses im|medately taken to damp and spoyl our trade; wherof decayes and complaints presently filled all the Countrey; while in the mean time nei|ther the Honour nor the Treasure of the King was at all advanced by this new Model of our Affairs, but a considerable Charge added unto the Crown.

§ IV. In little more than half a Year we saw this Commission superseded by another, yet more Absolute and Arbitrary, with which Sr. Edmond Andross arrived as our Governour: who besides his Power, with the Advice and Consent of his Council, to make Laws and raise Taxes as he pleased; had also Authority by himself to Muster and Imploy all Persons resi|ding in the Territory as occasion shall serve; and to transfer such Forces to any English Plan|tation in America, as occasion shall require. And several Companies of Red Coats were now brought from Europe, to support what was to be Imposed upon us, not without repeated Me|naces that some hundreds more were intended for us.

§ V. The Government was no sooner in these Hands, but care was taken to load Prefer|ments principally upon such Men as were stran|gers to, and haters of the People: and every ones Observation hath noted, what Qualifica|tions recommended a Man to publick Offices and Employments, only here and there a good man was used, where others, could not easily be had; Page  [unnumbered] the Governour himself with assertions now and then falling from him made us jealous that it would be thought for his Majesties Interest, if this People were removed and another suc|ceeded in their room: And his far fetched In|struments that were growing Rich among us, would gravely inform us, that it was not for His Majesties Interest that we should thrive. But of all our oppressors we were cheifly Squeezed by a crew of abject Persons fetched, from New|York to be the tools of the adversary standing at our right hand; by these were extraordinary and intollerable fees extorted from every one upon all occasions, without any Rules but those of their own insatiable avarice and beggary; and even the probate of a will must now cost as many Pounds perhaps as it did Shillings here|tofore; nor could a small Volume contain the other Illegalities done by these Horse-leaches in the two or three years that they have been sucking of us; and what Laws they made it was as impossible for us to know, as dangerous for us to break; but we shall leave the men of Ipswich and of Plimouth (among others) to tell the Story of the Kindness which has been shown 'em upon this account. Doubtless a land so Ruled as once New-England was, had not without many fears and sighs beheld the wicked walking on every side and the vilest men exalted.

§ VI. It was now plainly affirmed both by some in open Council and by the same in private converse, that the people in New-England were all Slaves and the only difference between them and Slaves is their not being bought and sold; and it was a maxim delivered in open Court unto us by one of the Council, that we must not think the Priviledges of English men would follow us to the end of the world: Accordingly we have been treated with multiplied contradicti|ons to Magna Charta, the rights of which we laid claim unto. Persons who did but peaceably object against the raising of Taxes without an Assembly have been for it Fined, some twenty, some thirty, and others fifty Pounds. Packt and pickt Juries have been very common things among us, when under a pretended form of Law the trouble of some perhaps honest and worthy Men has been aimed at: but when some of this Gang have been brought upon the Stage, for the most detestable Enormities that ever the Sun beheld, all Men have with Admira|tion seen what methods have been taken that they might not be treated according to their Crimes. Without a Verdict, yea, without a Jury sometimes have People been fined most un|righteously; and some not of the meanest quality have been kept in long and close Im|prisonment without any the least Information appearing against them, or an Habeas Corpus allowed unto them. In short, when our Mill|stones have been a little out of Money, 'twas but pretending some Offence to be enquired into, and the most innocent of Men were continu|ally put into no small expence to answer the Demands of the Officer, who must have Mo|ney of them, or a Prison for them: though none could accuse them of any Misdemeanour.

§ VII. To plunge the poor People every where into deeper Incapacities, there was one very comprehensive abuse given to us; multi|tudes of Pious and Sober Men through the Land scrupled the mode of Swearing on the Book, desiring that they might Swear with an uplifted hand, agreeable to the ancient custome of the Colony; and though we think we can prove that the Common Law amongst us (as well as in some other places under the English Crown) not only indulges, but even commands and enjoyns the rite of lifting the hand in Swearing; yet they that had this doubt were still put by from serving on any Juryes; and many of them were most unaccountably Fined and Imprisoned. Thus one grievance is a Trojan Horse, in the Belly of which it is not easy to re|count how many unsufferable Vexations have been contained.

§ VIII. Because these things could not make us miserable fast enough, there was a notable Discovery made, of, we know not what flaw in all our Titles to our Lands; and, though besides our purchase of them from the Natives, and, besides our actual peaceable unquestioned Possession of them, for near threescore years, and besides the Promise of K. Charles II. In his Proclamation sent over to us, in the Year 1683. that no man here shall receive any Prejudice in his Free-hold or Estate: we had the Grant of our Lands, under the Seal of the Council of Plymouth, which Grant was Renewed and Confirmed unto us by King Charles I. Under the great Seal of England; and the General Court which consisted of the Patten|tees and their Associates, had made particular Grants hereof to the several Towns (though 'twas now deny'd by the Governour, that there was any such Thing as a Town, among us; to all which Grants the General Court annexed for the further securing of them, A General Act Pub|lished under the Seal of the Colony, in the Year 1684. Yet we were every day told, That no man Page  [unnumbered] was owner of a Foot of Land in all the Colony. Accordingly, Writs of Intrusion began every where to be served on People; that after all their sweat and their cost upon their formerly purchased Lands, thought themselves Free holders of what they had. And the Governour caused the Lands pertaining to these and those particular men, to be measured out, for his Creatures to take possessi|on of; and the Right Owners, for pulling up the Stakes, have passed through Molestations enough to tire all the patience in the world. They are more than a few, that were by Terrors driven to take Pattents for their Lands at excessive rates, to save them from the next that might Petition for them: and we fear that the forcing of the people at the Eastward hereunto gave too much Rise to the late unhappy Invasion made by the Indians on them. Blanck Pattents were got ready for the rest of us, to be Sold at a Price, that all the Money and Moveables in the Territory could scarce have paid. And several Towns in the Country, had their Common, beg'd by Persons (even by some of the Council themselves) who have been pri|vately encouraged thereunto, by those that sought for occasions to impoverish a Land already Peel|ed, Meeted out and Trodden down.

§ IX All the Council were not ingaged in these 〈◊◊〉 but those of them which were true Lovers of their Country, were seldom admit|ted to, and seldomer consulted at the Debates which Produced these unrighteous things: Care was taken to keep them under disadvantages; and the Governour with five or six more did what they would. We bore all these, and ma|ny many more such things, without making any attempt for any Relief; only Mr. Mather purely out of Respect unto the good of his Afflicted Country, undertook a Voyage into England; which, when these men suspected him to be pre|paring for, they used all manner of Craft and Rage, not only to interrupt his Voyage, but to ruine his Person too. God having through many Difficulties given him to arrive at White Hall, the King more than once or twice Promised him a certain Magna Charta for a speedy redress of ma|ny things which we were groaning under: and in the mean time said, That our Governour should be written unto, to forbear the measures that he was upon. However, after this, we were injured in those very things, which were complained of; and besides what wrong hath been done in our civil Concerns, we suppose the Ministers, and the Churches every where have seen our Sacred Concerns a pace going after them: How they have been Discountenanced, has had a room in the reflections of every man, that is not a stran|ger in our Israel.

§ X And yet that our Calamity, might not be terminated here, we are again Briar'd in the Per|plexities of another Indian War; how, or why, is a mystery too deep for us to unfold. And tho' 'tis judged, there are not one hundred of our ene|mies, yet an Army of one thousand English hath been raised for the Conquering of them; which Army of our poor Friends and Brethren now under Popish Commanders (for in the Army as well as in the Council Papists are in Commission) Has been under such a conduct that not one In|dian hath been kill'd, but more English are sup|posed to have died through sickness, and hard|ship, and in a way little satisfactory to their Friends, then we have adversaries there alive; and the whole War hath been so managed, that we can't b•• suspect in it, a branch of the Plot, to bring us Low; which we propound further to be in due time enquired into.

§ XI We did nothing against these Proceed|ings, but only cry to our God; they have caused the cry of the Poor to come unto him, and he hears the cry of the Afflicted. We have been quiet hi|therto; and so still we should have been, had not the Great God at this time laid us under a double engagement to do something for our security: be|sides, what we have in the strangely unanimous inclination Which our Countrymen by extream|est necessities are driven unto. For first, we are Informed that the rest of the English America is Alarmed with just and great fears, that they may be attaqu'd by the French, who have lately ('tis said) already treated many of the English with worse then Turkish Crueltys; and while we are in equal danger of being surprised by them, it is high time we should be better guarded, then we are like to be while the Government remains in the hands by which it hath been held of late. Moreover, we have understood, (though the Go|vernour has taken all imaginable care to keep us all ignorant thereof) that the Almighty God hath been pleased to prosper the noble undertaking of the Prince of Orange, to preserve the three King|doms from the horrible brinks of Popery and Slavery, and to bring to a Condign punishme•• those worst of men, by whom English Libertin have been destroy'd; in compliance with which Glorious Action, we ought surely to follow the Patterns which the Nobility, Gentry and Com|monalty, Page  [unnumbered] in several parts of the Kingdom have set before us, though they therein have chiefly proposed to prevent what we already endure.

§ XII. We do therefore seize upon the per|sons of those few Ill men which have been (next to our sins) the grand authors of our miseries: Resolving to secure them, for what Justice, Orders from his Highness with the Parliament shall di|rect, lest ere we are aware we find (what we may fear, being on all sides in danger) our selves to be by them given away to a Forreign Power, before such orders can reach unto us; for which Orders we now Humbly wait. In the mean time firmly believing: that we have endeavoured no|thing but what meer Duty to God and our Coun|try calls for at our Hands, we commit our Enter|prise unto the Blessing of Him, who hears, the cry of the Oppressed; and advise all our Neighbours for whom we have thus ventured our selves to joyn with us in Prayers and all just Actions for the Prosperity of the Land.

BOSTON Printed by Samuel Green, and Sold by Benjamin Harris at the London Coffee-House 1689.