357 .Y76 ^opy 1 mamli ^LIBRARY OF CONGRESS J # «»' ^ [FORCE COL.LECTION.J ^ f UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. » ;n.,^.;n^ ^-N^ ,;^S^i»^,, m >*«««S ri- _'a/^A'^ UV,^*'uW^>u«' .::^-wr. ^vv-wv^, SPEECH OP \/ MR. YOVNG, ^'5£^>J«. f«^t IN THK LEGISLATURE OP NEW-YORK, FEBRUARY, 1814. ^y /? >7 '^ Jk NEW YORK : ' pjRijrrED Br e, coj^rad, NO. 4, FRANKFORT-STREET, PIBECTLT OPPOSITE TAMMANT-HAtt. 1814. Speech of M\ Youngs OF SARATOGA, ON THE PROPOSED AN SWER TO THE GOVERNOR'S SPEECH, IN COMJMJTTEE OF THE WHOLE. MR. CHAIRMAN, I CANNOT reconcile it to my feelings, nor to the duty I owe ir,y crtn- stitnents, to give a mere silent vote on the question now before the com- mittee. Tlie proposed address contains sentiments against which I fee! coii- Strained to enter my most solemn protest. — What but a sincere disposition for peace conld have induced the American government to sufliBr from Great Britain, for a long series of years, an accumulation of wrongs, injuries and outrages, unprecedented in the history of nations? If, sir, the government had felt the least iHclined to war, opportunities have not been wanting ill which it might long since hare been declared, consistent with the spon- taneous and almost united feelings of the American people. The destruc- tive operation, on our commerce^ of wliat is termed the rule of '56, of paper blockades and orders in council, the actual blockade of our ports imd harbors, the murder of Pierce, the attack on the Chesapeake and the disavowal of Erskine's arrangement, furnished occasions, on at least some of which our government was loudly called on to resist British aggressions, by the very men who now so bitterly oppose the war. No man in this committee can have forgotten the strong language in which many of the merchants and ship owners in our principal seaports me- morialized congress, on feeling the sweeping effects of Biitish commercial restrictions. No man can have forgotten that they pledocd themselves, in the most solemn manner, to support the government of the United States in any stand it might deem proper to take, in opposing the rapine and vio- lence of Great Britain. The attack on the Chesapeake, also, excited one universal burst of public indignation. Even the murder of Pierce, one solitary tailor, created then more sympathetic indignation in the opposers of the administratiuii. than the same men now appear to feel at the impressment, slavery and wretchedness of thousands. I hold in my hand, sir, certain resolutions adopted on that occasion, by a meeting in the city of New- York, of which CorneUus Ray was chair- man, and Saraue! Boyd Secretary, These vcsolntinnv" were reported lo the meeting bj a. committee, consisting of Rufus King, Ebcnezer Stevcos, Oliver Wolcott, William W. Woolsey and William Henderson. Two of them are as follows : " Resolved, That the murder of John Pierce, one of our fellow citizens, by a shot from a British ship of war, at the entrance of our harbor and within half a mile of the shore, while he was engaged in peaceably navi- gating a coasting vessel laden with provisions for our market, was an act that excites our detestation and abhorrence, and calls upon our government for the adoption of prompt andvigorous measures to prevent a repetition of such wanton and inhuman conduct, and so flagrant a violation of our national sovereignty." " Resolved, That this meeting approve the conduct of those persons ivho intercepted the supplies which were sent from this city to thos© ves* csels who now blockade our harbor, and who have murdered our fellow citi- zen John Pierce." If our Government had not felt a sincere disposition for peace, before the declaration of war, why. I would ask, did they not seize on some of these favorable moments to declare war against Great Britain ? Since the declaration of war the pacific disposition of our government has been equally manifest. The law of congress which prohibits, on cer- tain conditions, the employment of foreign seamen ou board our public or private ships, and the promptness with which our government have met every olfer of negociation, are to my mind incontestible proofs of such a ect to the rights of our citizen:-, and yet denying tiie oniy nitJiins of ascer- taining tliose rights, amounted, ici the language of secretary Pickering, to '• an insulting tantalism" — that our government repcat&diy offered to enter into any reasonable accommodation on the subject, and that these offers were nsver accepted — and that instead of desisting from the pr.icticij, cases of impressment have yearly inulLiplied, so that in IHIJ upwards of titKJO impressed Americans were in the Britisii service. I would now a' y< ars iionce he could revisit this earth, and participate in the cares and concerns of the living, with what emotions would he belit)ld one of his linta! descendants in slavery and chains ? With what agon!'ii,iiig sensations would he hear the wretched captive repeat the sad story of his sufJt rings and his woes/ Hv-^v would ho bear the just reproaches of the victim of imprcssmcnL — thcvictiiJi of " the maritime rights of England .'" Tlie practice of impressment cannot be defended by tlie laws of eilher God or m;in. For what purpose do we enter into so«iety .' Why, on enter- ing into the social compact, do mankind give up a pait of tl;eir n.^lriai rights ? It is for the purpose of being [)rotected in the enjoymeni of tii< it - mainder. Prelection and allegiance. are reciprocal ; they are jijutualiy the price of each otlier. The principal duty of the govrosperity, tho \merican people could at once assume a military attitude— that they could suddf^ulv become as well versed in the art of war as Great Britam, whose princioal business for the list two centuries has been bloodshed and slaugh- ter a^id who has fer several ages, rioted on the spoils and miseries oi ni:''n'-ind But our oiiicers collectively taken, areas brave and well »|ua- lified r.s were ever selected in any country, alter so long an indulgence m the lap of peace. Thev have on many occasions .e>;hibited instances oi eonra-re and conduct, bc'vond which the most experienced vciterans would not as-pire. Not but that an instance might possibly be lound in winch an oir.cer has disgraced his profession ami his country ; in which he has shown no mcliuatioir for fighting, no disposition for war ; in which, sir, he hi^ <'iven uneciuivocal proof that he belongs to the I'K-^ce tautv. Another otijection to the proposed address, is to be found in that paif of it which casts a stigma ou our troops for burning Newark, "and turn- ing hundreds of men, women and children, without a ho«ie and without a covering, into an inhospitalile wihterness, at a most inclement season ol^ the year." — This part ol' the address, sir, appears to have been copied from the proclamation of Provost, the Governor of Canada. 31y objection ti> it is, that it is entirely unfounded in point of fact. I am authorized by two members of this house, (Messrs. AVarner and Cruger) to state, that they were at Fort George when Newark was destroyed, and not above twelve, or at most fdteen Canadian families inhabited that village, at or inmiediately preceding its conflagration ; and that these I'amilies were oilerod support and protection if they would cross over to the American shore, which oHiir seve- ral of them accepted. I am further authorized to .state by one of these gen- tlemen, (Mr. Cruger) who was an oUicer at Fort George, and who was consulted on the propriety of burning Newark, that the few inhabitants who were in the village at the time that measure was determined on, were warned to leave it, and that our troops assisted in removing their effects. That the reason why the village was destroyed was to prevent its becoming a lodgment for the enemy, from whence they might annoy our frontier. But, sir. since the mode of carrying on the war has been at all alluded to in this address, I wish some little indignation had been shown at the conduct of the enemy. I should have been pleased, sir, if the burning of French Town and Havre de Grace, the rapes, murders and pillage at. Hampton, the horrid barbarities at the River Raisin and other places, and the tomahawking, and scalping of hundreds of our defenceless women and children, had excited as much sensibility in the Committee who drafted the address, as the inconvenience sustained by half a dozen Canadian families in being deprived of their dwellings. I have now, sir, mentioned a few of my objections to the proposed address — objections which I trust will not be disregarded by the Committee. But before I sit down, I beg leave to take notice of some very extraordinary observations made by the gentleman from New-York, (3Ir. D. B. Ogden.) — That gentleman, sir, in the course of his remarks, attempted to assimilate the supporters of the present war to the tories of the revolution. Vain and ineffectual attempt ! The to- nes of the revolution were the advocates of Great Britain ; they declared that the British government was right, and that America was wrong ; that the war was cruel, unjust and unnecessary ; that England had a right to tax the Colonies, and that it was their duty to submit ; that three pence per pound on tea, and the theoretical right of taxing the Colonies in all cases whatsoever, were trifling grievances when compared with the mise- ries of war ; that the war would cost a great deal of blood and treasure, and that its objects could never be obtained; that Great Britain was a powerful and proud nation, and would never acknowledge the indepen- dence of her Colonies ; that the war had totally destroyed that prosperity and trade which the Colonies had previously enjoyed ; and that on the score of interest, it was far better to submit to the mother country, and again enjoy the blessings of commerce and peace. Such, sir, were the doctrines propagated by the tories in the revolu- tionary war ; such were the principles w hicli they taught their children — principles which some of their sons* have not forgotten to this day. But these principles, thank God, did not then succeed. Had they prevailed, the man, whoever he might be, who should now occupy the chair to pre- side over the deliberations of this assembly, might sit in all the mock ma- •■ Looking at Messrs, Ogdeo and Joaei, of NeTy-York, 8 jesty oF oolotiial vassahi^e, with a human scalp suspeiKled over his head ! A 'hiiniiiii scalp, sir, as an emblem to nidicate that Great Britain is the world's last iiope, the friend and protector of suffering humanity and the bulwark of our religion ! I am astonished, sir, when I hear any man who applauds the spirit of our lathers in the revolution, who approves their struggle a2;ainst tiic oppression of Great Britain, pronounce the present war *' unjust." The United States were then Colonies, and bound to yield obedience and submission to every constitutional claim of the parent state. — A duty of three pence per pound on tea, was I think, the only actual grievance, which immediately affected the great body of the patriots of that day. And yet. sir, without dicipline, without the munitions of war, and without half the numerical force which America now contains, they bid defiance to this proiid oppressor. No partry motives of self interest, of commercial ad- vantage, of present profit or present enjoyment, found place in their de- liberations. — They looked forward to the emancipation of their country from British injustice, as an ample reward for all their dangers, privatioDs and toils ; and it is owing to their achievements that we now claim to be an independent nation. And how, sir, shall we emulate their virtues ? This surely cannot be effected by receding from the present contest, by humbling ourselves at the foot stool of Great Britain, and tamely sub- mitting to injuries more humiliating and disgraceful than the wrongs which roused her Colonies to arms. For it is an undeniable truth, that tor a long time previous to the declaration of war, we had sufiered outrages and ag- gressions from Great Britain, of a more aggravating and intolerable kind, than she inflicted on her colonies in '75 : and if future generations are as- tonished at the proud spirit of our fathers, they will regard with equal amazement the long and patient sufferance of their sons. ^:].o^;?^Sn.%o,AA'^ '?Q0>^0' «» HVl./S'A ^^'^^'^/^"^■■-■ ^i^C^'Ciii * ' ,0 a' '^ A '^^ ^' - *' ^ ;> ''^ /^ A ' ^ 'r^'f^j^k^.Ai.^.'^,^.-/m,T^;^'Q':\:c^^^ ^'>^ >A,A/^- A^/^ ii.'i''^PA*A; «««^H^^# ;;;.-;K"-H."S„^5^;Sf.A i-^„:» .R^ ^^:a'*-^:^'^;r*^'"aW^ *'?«W«WS; CQ.'?A AOr^^^AM v^.^^;.--::j ■^^^H;* '^Aj^OnO. Va>"^ -'A/ ^:^<^i 'i/rnma :''^<^'^".^r' LIBRARY OF CONGRESS III II ill! Ill III ill nllil 01 1 896 640 5