8 March M
r Hawes
It seems to me that this calls for much more explanation than is
here given. The Hudson's Bay Company propose that the
whole of the
Oregon Territory shd be granted to them as the
Lords and Owners of it, exactly in the manner in
wh: the ancient proprietary Gov
mts were constituted on the North American Continent in the 16
th & 17
th Centuries. Without a word of preliminary discussion (so far as I know) they have
sent the
dft of a Charter to
accomplish this object. My own belief is that to execute such a scheme
now
wd be impracticable, unconstitutional, & illegal; and that, even
if it were otherwise, it
wd be indispensable to ascertain 1
st That
the H.B. Comp
y are capable of such a Grant — a point
wh: the recent
opinion of the Law Officers of The Crown does not ascertain. Secondly. That they have
resources and a Capital available for the Colonization
& Settlem
t of this Territory — a subject on
wh: they say nothing.
Thirdly. That they have some well-consid
d plans of proceeding,
wh: is
here taken for granted. Fourthly. That it
wd be possible to maintain a Proprietary lordship with powers independent of The Crown
& Parliam
t in the
immediate vicinity of the Great Nation now peopling the North American Continent — a circumstance
wh: totally changes the
present state of such a quest
n from the state of corresponding questions in the reigns of Elizabeth and the Stuart
Family. Fifthly. That there is any good reason why if we are to have a Colony at all
at
Oregon, we
shd not also have the Electoral and other Franchises prevailing in every other part of
the North American Continent. Sixthly. That there is any good reason why the Crown
shd abdicate to this, or to any other, Company the prerogative, privilege & duty, of
Colonizat
n if Colonizat
n be desirable. Seventhly. That it is politic to
establish in the 19
th Century a new Proprietary
Govnt
in defiance of the proofs
wh: all History furnishes of the impossibility of maintaining such a
Govnt any longer than the inhabitants are too
few & too feeble to shake it off. Long before the American War
the Colonists had thrown off every vestige of those Institutions: and had
universally established the Representative form; buying up the rights of
the Lords proprietors at an heavy expence of money; or trampling upon
them at a still heavier expence of Justice. For the reasons
wh: I thus
rapidly suggest, it seems to me that this scheme is a very unmeaning
one, & merits no encouragem
t