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Letter from the New-York Congress to their Delegates in the Continental Congress. Deeply impressed with the necessity of an accommodation with our Parent State, and conscious that the best service we can render to the present and all future generations must consist in promoting it, we have laboured to point out such moderate terms as may tend to reconcile the unhappy differences, and take the liberty of enclosing the result of our deliberations. [1775-06-28] [S4-V2-p1329] [Document Details][Complete Volume]
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In Provincial Congress, New-York, June 28, 1775.
GENTLEMEN: Deeply impressed with the importance, the utility, and necessity of an accommodation with our Parent State, and conscious that the best service we can render to the present and all future generations, must consist in promoting it, we have laboured without intermission to point out such moderate terms as may tend to reconcile the unhappy differences which threaten the whole Empire with destruction.
We now take the liberty of enclosing to you the result of our deliberations; and although we have not the presumption to suppose that our weak ideas on this momentous subject will be entirely approved of by you, much less by that august body of which you are members; yet we take leave to observe, that the breach has been much widened since our first dispute on the subject of taxation; and as this was the source of all our grievances, so we have the hope that the temptation being taken away, our civil and religious and political rights will be easily adjusted and confirmed.
You will observe, gentlemen, that by a resolution of the House, subjoined to the report of our Committee, we consider the whole as entirely subjected to your better judgment, and each article as far independent of each other as you may think most proper or convenient. We must now repeat to you the common and just observation, that contests for liberty, fostered in their infancy by the virtuous and wise, become sources of power to wicked and designing men; from whence it follows, that such controversies as we are now engaged in frequently end in the demolition of those rights and privileges which they were instituted to defend. We pray you, therefore, to use every effort for the compromising of this unnatural quarrel between the parent and child; and if such terms as you may think best shall not be complied with, earnestly to labour, that at least some terms may be held up, whereby a treaty shall be set on foot to restore peace and harmony to our Country, and spare the further effusion of human blood; so that if even at the last our well-meant endeavours shall fail of effect, we may stand fair, and stand unreproachable by our own consciences in the last solemn appeal to the God of battles.
We are, gentlemen, your most obedient humble servants.
To the Delegates for the Colony of New-York in Continental Congress.
Letter from the New-York Congress to their Delegates in the Continental Congress
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Letter from the New-York Congress to their Delegates in the Continental Congress. Deeply impressed with the necessity of an accommodation with our Parent State, and conscious that the best service we can render to the present and all future generations must consist in promoting it, we have laboured to point out such moderate terms as may tend to reconcile the unhappy differences, and take the liberty of enclosing the result of our deliberations. [1775-06-28] [S4-V2-p1329] [Document Details][Complete Volume]