Excerpt from Report of the Joint Select Committee of the Senate and House of Representatives, of the State of Maine, in Relation to the North-Eastern Boundary of the State
Plied from the forest surrounding it. When I was at St. John's two years ago, I was informed, that in consequence of the remonstrance made to the Brit ish Minister at Washington, by our Government, against the practice of granting permits for cutting timber from the public lands, a messenger from Eng land had been sent to St. John's, who passed up to the head of the river, and on his return, declared the Americans to be right, in the construction of the treaty relative to the boundary line, and order ed a step to be put to granting permits, and all those issued for the Winter of 1825 - 6 were recal led. I was much gratified at hearing this, and be lieving at that time an adjustment might take place, thought it best to proceed no further in making deeds. The excitement has progressed with the people on the frontiers regularly to the present time, and I believe the personal interest of Major Fraser (who has several farms on the banks of the river, within the disputed territory, and is a member of the Province Assembly,) as also of said Wilmot and Peters, have prevented by their influence, an hon ourable adjustment, and kept the people in a fer ment.
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Excerpt from Report of the Joint Select Committee of the Senate and House of Representatives, of the State of Maine, in Relation to the North-Eastern Boundary of the State
The aforesaid Joint Select Committee of the Senate and House of Representatives of the State of Maine, have considered the whole subject submitted to them by the aforesaid Order, to wit: All the Governor's Message which relates to the North-Eastern Boundary, which is as follows, to wit: - "In the number of our resources is one so conspicuous, that it must early attract your notice. It is that of a wild and fertile territory, embracing about six millions of acres. It is not necessary now to attempt to show how evidently it is subject to your jurisdiction, nor to speak of its distinguished natural advantages which impart to it the capacity of sustaining some hundred thousand yeomen. Valuable, or rather invaluable, as it is, we ought without hesitation to surrender it if we cannot with justice support that claim to it which unfortunately now stands opposed under the difficulty of an ingenuity which has endeavored to obscure the line, and an opposition, which, I trust, you will dispassionately authorize to be resisted under the limitations of a cautious and prudent, yet decided policy.
"The Government of the State, with the exemplary moderation always creditable and necessary, has for years refrained from the exercise of many of its rights. It has been induced to do so, as may be inferred, from its anxious desire to accommodate to the wishes of the federal administration, and its disposition to avoid collisions, inevitably unfortunate, in any result. At the same time, it cannot abandon its obligations, its title deeds, and its rights. It cannot allow the citizens to be incarcerated in foreign gaols. The State would shrink most dreadfully under the shame of such a submission. For the sake of being fully informed, it has for several years solicited the documents possessed by the general government in relation to this subject. It is with great confidence that I urge its consideration now, inasmuch as all that has been requested has been supplied agreeably to what was understood to be the wish of the last Legislature. That invaluable mass of documents, now in the Secretary's Office, and the copies of communications between myself and others contain nearly all that I can offer.
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This book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in our edition. We do, however, repair the vast majority of imperfections successfully; any imperfections that remain are intentionally left to preserve the state of such historical works.
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