Papers of John Adams, volume 21
th1796
In behalf of the Connecticut Susquehannah Company, I take
the liberty of addressing to you an enquiry relative to one point of their
Title to land lying west of New York, within the limits of their Charter,
and covered also by the Charter to Sr. William
Penn.
I need not mention that their claim rests upon three
foundations, viz. the earliest royal grants, the earliest valid Indian Deed,
and the earliest actual occupancy. Their grants from the Crown are contained
in the original Charter to the great Plymouth Council, the assignments
deduced down from said Company, through the Earl of Warwick, Ld. Say &c & the Confirmatory Charter of
Charles 2nd. dated in 1662. These all extend
westward, it is conceived, to the South 478 Sea.
In addition to the express words of the Charters, there are collateral
proofs of their extent. The Congress at Albany in 1754, declared that “The
Ancient Colonies of the Massachusetts Bay & Connecticut are were by their respective Charters
made to extend to the said South Sea.” The acceptance of the Cessions from
Massachusetts & Connecticut, by the Congress, under the articles of
Confederation, are considered as tacit acknowledgments of the western extent
of those Charters. You have understood that in negotiating the Peace of 1783
our Ministers urged these Charters, as well as that of Virginia, as an
argument for ceding or rather confirming to the United States, the lands
westward as far as the Mississippi, the western boundary of the former
British dominions; that the British Ministers acknowledged that extent of
the grants contained in the Charters, and that it was upon that principle
solely, or chiefly, that the Weste[rn] Territory was obtained. If these were
the facts, we conceive they furnish additional proof of our construction of
the Connecticut Charter, to wit, that it extends westward of the State of
New York, whereas the Pennsylvania Claimamants confine it to the eastern
side of that State.1
As you, Sir, acted a principal part in that memorable negociation, the knowledge of the whole is doubtless in your possession. Such information upon these points, as may be proper to be communicated, I have the honour to request. Whether the negociation was conducted by Letter or personal conferences, or both; whether the negociators kept Journals of the arguments urged by them; whether, if such documents remain, extracts relative to our purpose would be granted, with liberty to make public use of them, are questions respectfully submitted.
The magnitude of the subject, the immense property depending upon the determination, & my duty to the Connecticut Company, as one of their Council, are my apologies for the trouble of this application. Being an entire stranger, I make it with diffidence; but I hope it will be excused. An answer by the mail, as soon as more important occupations will permit, will confer a peculiar obligation upon a numerous class of citizens, who are interested in the event of the question.
With sentiments of veneration & the warmest wishes for the prosperity of that Government, which you have so largely contributed to form, to cement, to enlighten & direct, I have the honour to be, Sir, your most obedient humble servant,
RC (Adams Papers); internal address: “Vice President Adams—” Some loss of text due to wear at the edge.
Lawyer Barnabas Bidwell (1763–1833), originally from
Tyringham, Mass., Yale 1785, articulated a longstanding dispute over
land rights in the Wyoming Valley, which had festered between the
Connecticut residents’ Susquehannah Company and Pennsylvania settlers
since 1753. Both sides supplied competing documentation, including
Charles II of England’s colonial charter and John Penn’s purchase of
land from Six Nations peoples. Struggling to quell the serial outbreaks
of violence, the Continental Congress named a commission to investigate
the claims; it ruled in favor of Pennsylvania on 30 Dec. 1782, but the
conflict continued. There is no evidence that JA intervened
(
Biog. Dir. Cong.
; Hamilton, Papers
, 22:174–175).