Gazette of the United-States. (New-York [N.Y.]) 1789-1793, July 24, 1793, Page 479, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    it was reporteS there,
tliai a French fleet of cowfiderable
forefi, bad fallen in,with the Britifti
. £ait aad Weft India outward bound
.fleets, undjer convoy of two men of
•war and four frigates, off Cape-Fi
iiUtcie, and captured 160 l'ail. This
report bad been corroborated there
by accounts from Cape-Francois, Ja
iuaica, and some other places.
ELIZABETH-TOWN, July t?.
On the lorlv inftaut, arrived here
in guod health, by the way of De
troit. Niagara, and Genefee river,
Oliver Spencer, of Columbia, in the
Weltem Territory, from whence
he was taken last July, by two Sha
wanele Indians', and carried into
their nation, where he was detain
ed a prisoner, until redeemed a few
jnonths palt, at the price of fitfty
pounds, through the kind inteipo
litjoi) of Col. Richard England, on
the application of the lad's numer
«us connections and friends.
t STAUNTON, July 6.
$ttra{h of a letter jro,m a gentleman in
the.Southern Territory of the United
States, to the Printers hereof, dated
KuoxvtlU, June 17.
<< I can a (lure yon from good au
thority, that the Spanilh govern
ment does not take an active part
•with the hostile Indians —but that
on the contrary, the government of
Louifianaf, has wrote more than one
letter to the Cherokes nation, dif
foading them from pnt'fuing their
hodilines againttthe United States.
Thcfe letters together with the cx
eriions, appeared to have the de
filed effedt on the minds of the In
dians, t'ney had agreed in council
tD to Philadelphia this fumuier,
to visit the President agreeable to
an invitation from him, and had a(-
fembled at the Hanging Maw s to
tonfult on the time of llartifig, and
the route they Ihould ptarfae, when
on the 12'h intrant, Captain John
Braird, who had been ordered out
for the prote<ftion of ihe frontiers
of this terr itory, with express or
ders fiQ ii Gov. Blount not to cross
tb» renelfee, having eroded it the
proceeding' night, attacked the
jjoiife of the Maw about break of
day, killed feveu fellows, one wo
rn at?-, and a white man, and wound
ed ethers, among the wounded
w/.isthe Hanging Maw, his wife and
foil, and among the killed were
Scamie and Charley, two chiefs
ir.oie difiinguifhed for their friend
lhip to the whites, than any other
Indians in ihe Cherokee nation.—l
fl .eerely hope, and it is the wish of
evejy friend to order in this terri
tory, that the (frong arm of the fe
deral government, ma; be exerctl
ed to' bs iilg to justice such daring
»Vola;i6us of the laws of our coun
try.
" The Indians flill continue to
rifeft our frontiers, pnrticularly
Mer>> diUriilt ; and [hough all the
chiefs .«f both the Cbeiokee and
Creek nations were to go to Phila
delphia, I am afraid our fitoation
W'nild not be bettered—the friend
fliip of tlvefe wandering aborigines
of I his country cannot he purcbafed,
and the manner in which Congress
attempt it, js'of all modes the molt
U'lfa-voiable to 'he aitfcinnient or
the ot jetk, -hey pick up fotiie who
are considered the principal rharac
tei s in the nation, and to belt-«bey
give extraordinary presents—and
who are they but thole who It-'ve
killed the molt whites ; and wiien
the young fellows fee such high te
wards bid for ihe scalps of the citi
zens of the Uni ed Sta es, they are
encouraged to take their ha.chet or
guji, and repair to our frontieil, as
the only wav to secure an honora
ble and friendly introduction to
Philadelphia.
mTIMORE, Jnlv 18.
Tht Inhabitants of Caps-Francois
TO THt
Inhabitants «/ Baltimore.
WHAT a piinlul and at the hine nine con
foline fprftarlr doe» the town o) nn ire now
fjidint' What lcen> *ol #I#and ass fci'.ng lym
pi'by ! What a ptel ne of wietchcdocfi aud bc
o. ficeiite !
{Utec eldping Iroff* Ihe honor i of fire »n(l
FummA—(win all the (uiy >h«t a horde ni fa»ag««
can br,fupp|fad captt'k of, whole fmili are in
to effiile lothe-fm*lkl friitiUK ni ol humanity
odi towuiy—abandoning out foi
tfSnes, fc?q:»ire(s Sv the tatfori of frrtm twenty !<►
thirty years; us-a iline of abfoltiie waut — »r. >fl
of us (tparated from our huiband?, our. wives,'
out parent#, our" children, our Uierids.— A pain
ful' resignation *io the (lifpcnf«>»iiiirs of piovidfiicc
was alone capaMcof atrcftmg ciic ciFcdls of our
defpatr :—But this Provide nee has givc.ioufljr re
ferred us once mote to talle of happifiefs—Savor
ing us with a rr.oli prosperous navigation, it has
condu£fced us to a hofpi table flvjre, where all
the citizens have received us with open arms—* r
where.every heart has expanded with pity for
our dif<Jonfola»e fiiuation— where every com on
and afiiUance has been most bountifully afford d
us-— scarcely were our misfortunes known to
this generous people, whe# an asylum was of
fered us in the boiom of iheir families—-i large
fubferiptmn opened—and all that-relief, only to
be expe&ed in a great and populous city, at
once found in the fwrgle: to<bu of Baltimore. t
Generous inhabitants of Baltimore ! receive
these public exptefiVms of a / gratitude that Hull
polfeif onr heaits till our laieft brpsth—.that fl-ja!l
be perpetuaied in the hearts of our children,
whom it shall be our duty to hiirij* up in these
frntiments for : We will inform them of the
benevolent reception 'you have given us; we
will tell them that it is you who. have restored
us to life—but how will it ever be poflible for
us to dcfcribe to them the obliging caics, the
delicate attentions, the engaging and kind con
cern you have rrMuifeiied to us—the mark's of
fympathv, the tender compassion you have
(hewn tor our fork-ring—the fwcet consolation
you have procured us—the tears you have f"hed
with us—and, in fine, the deep sense you have "
difcOvi icd ol the horrors ol our wretched faua
tion.
Receive the afTufances of a gratitude- whose
weight fits lighter on our hearts, from ac
companying your bmevolencc with a to'ichiug
fenlibility, that marks true generosity with all
those sHades of delicacy that infinitely enhances
its value.
Receive the assurances of all those fentimrnts
with which we are so deeply ptneirated, and
o! our fervent wifhts for a continuance of that
ptofperity of which you are so eminen'.Ty dc
ierving, from the honorable use you me fcc of "it.
Citizens, a bale calumny may poflibly ltrive
to puifue us to the fnehdly asylum you have
opened : but wi bcfcech you not to (ifteu to i:s
suggestions—to the k'mduefs you have already
shewn us, ?dd thai of being on your gu.nd a
gainst it.—Our enemies, envious of thai .humane
concern with which you endeavor to *niake us
forget our misfortunes, may endeavor Hill to
pcrfecute us, by attempting to rob us of
efteero. Alas! we trull we may with confi
dence fay that wedefcrveit—we deny with that
assurance that innocence alone can give, the dtf
pofitions rtjoft injurious imputed to us, of mak
ing rcfiUance to those laws dilated for us by our
country.
Virtuous Americans! be not. fgrprifcd that
we cannot convey to yoa the frnfe of-all.we feci
on this oceafion ; the great sensations of the
mind are tar beyond the rriofl impassioned pow
ers of language, and your hearts arc fufficiently.
acquainted with them to judge what mult be
the extent of our feelings.
TRENTO N, July 17,
The exports of the United ."States for (lie
year endiugon the last of September, amount,
ed to 21,035,568 dollar,. They stand thus t
Value ot' wares, goodi apd merchandise,
exported from each state, agreeably to the
abftraft laid before Coiigrefs, 27th February,
>793 Dollar s.
New Hampfliire, - 181,407
MalTachu'etts, - . 2,889,922
Rhode-Illand, - . 698,084
- - 749,9"5
New-York, - . .. 2,528^85
Pennrylvania,
Delaware,
Maryland,
Virginia,
North-Carolina,
South Carolina,
Georgia,
Dollars, 21,005,568
Mk.'Tsn no,
In the following extract from Mr. Trumbvll's
McFtnga! nay be traced the genuine features of
those writers in the National Caiztte x who arc tn
c jjjntly laboring to render the government of the
u»ion odious to the people. b\ giving it a place
in your paper you will oblige A Rrtder.
" YE dupes to ev'ry factiouS rogue,
Or tavernpratiig demagogue,
Whole tongue but rings with found more full,
On the empty drumhead of his. {bull,
Y u do not know what noisy fools
LI e you, worse simpleton?:. for tools 1
For Liberty in your own byfenfe
I? but for crimes a paVMit licence ;
To break of law th' Egyptian yoke,
And throw the *>oi Id in common stock,
Hedtice all grievances and ills
To Magna Charta of your wills,
Eflabl (h chea's and frauds and nonsense,
Fi am'd hv the model of your conscience,
Cry justice down, as out of Kafliion
And fix its Icale of dep'eciation,
Defy all c editors to trouble ve,
And oafs new vears of J*.w■ (h jubilee ;
Drive judge* our, like Aaron's calves,
ByjnrifJiftions of wli ti- Haves,
And make th-' ba and bench and steeple,
Snbnrit t' our fov'ieigi Lord the People ;
Affil e each k-ave his whole alfets,
By gen'ral amnesty of debt-;
plunder rile to pow'r and glory,
■And brand all property as tory^
Exoofe all wares to lawful leisure*
Of mobbirs a id monopolizers;
3'eak heads and windows and the peace, '
F .r yon.* own int'reft and increase j
Dispute a;'d pray and fight and groan,
Pgr public »r.J mean own.'
479
Philadelphia, Jiily 24.
y«B»fday.arrived here a (hip from Scot-
J4nd, prize to the Xebeque Sans Culottes, of
said to be worth forty tiiou:aLid
pounds ilefiiog;
Tjw privateer Sans Culottes, which cap
tured the Betfev, belonging to this port,
'tis fVtd, failed from Nantz the 2cJ:h April*—
consequently the account of that city's being
taken by the Royalists the 2lit, is premature.
The letter from Baltimore in our last, in
forming of an arrival in 32 days from Cork,
with an account of the defeat of the combined
army, turns out to be a mistake.
An ertprefs arrived in town last Saturday
frof it the Commiflioners to the hostile Indians,
■nid, we hear, brought favorable intelligence
■.rjjijVjftiiij tfce progress of the treaty, ,
foytfhe Salty, Capt. from Cape-Fran
cois, which (he left the 4th of July, we learn,
that at that time about one. fourth- of the
tQ-.vn remained (landing, but entirely defer ted
bv the white inhabitants. A few negroes re
mained, who' were employed *in burying the
dead. The ConiraifHoners Santhona* and
Polverel remained at Ha lit du Cap, a final!
<tiitan.ee from the town, attended by the inw
-lat toes, negroes, and their other adherents
The Commilfioners had ifTued orders to one of
' the mulattoe generals to disarm all the whites,
a$ It was fuppbfed peace could not be restored
to the island anti! they were deprived us all
power of interfering with the Coin mi (lionet's,
whose expre!'f business was to enforce the de
cree of the Convention of France, grantii.g
certain privilege's to the people of-colour.
A report is in town of the capture of Fort
Dauphin by the Spaniards.
In the Georg a Packet, from Charleston,
came padengers,.Pierce Rutler, Esq. Senator
of the United States, and Wm- Sjviith. Esq.
a ;Rep re Tentative in Congress, of S. Carolina.
kxtratl oj a fetter from Captain Bmh-ardO'BrY
a n, a prij'nnrr at Algiers r datrd December 29M,
1 792, dud eighth ye fir oj hi yQaplivitx,
u - last I gave you Tome infor
matipn relative fa the Spanish AmbaiTador,
being commiflioned to try to obtain a Peace
with this Regency tor Portugal, but I believe'
this propofit-on was strongly oppoftd by the
Aigerine Ministry; at present there is no
thing said on this fubjeft.
ii - Prulfia has obtained Peace with the Al
gerines through the mediation of Spain ; the
terms are seventy thousand sequins, a tribute
every two years, and consolatory presents.
44 This Peace appears very mysterious to
me—l suppose it is a temptation held out to
Prufiia by the Spanifli Court, to join the con
federacy of despots aga nft the French.
44 Should the Portuguese be so happy as to
obtain a peace with the Algerines, what
would be the fatal confequtfnce to the Anie
rican commerce? A inoft tempting argument
has been held out to the Regency here, by the
Spanish Consul, namely, that they would be-
makers of the great ft#, as no maritime
power would then be capable of prevent ng
their cruizersfrom visiting the Atlantic ocean,
whenever they thought proper.
14 We are daily expe&i-g to hear foine
thing from America lelating to a peace ; —'
the sum has been a r certained fmce last April
by MeliVs. Bnfhara and Diainio, and I hope
Congress will take this matter into their nioft
ferjous jponfideratior!—-ll* .the terms are re
je&ed no peace will be afterward? •
I fay nothJnw; a^"T 11 uC "PP® 31 "
- ..vftig victims of American Inde
pendence.
3,820,1
" Our humane countrymen in Europe have
made out to remit us a monthly allowance to
alleviate our fuffcrings, fur which they 're
ceived the orde. s of Cor.grefs fourteen months
ago.
2,5-53,258
3,5:9.499
5 32,294
2,917,9:9
458.973
u Suppose a peace (hould take place—-is it
just,- that an unfortunate remnant of Ame
ricans should remain in captivity, at a time
ivhen »great part of the world are enlight
ened by the 3anie of Liberty.
" We are all in the marine except Sloan—
Slave* have become very fcarre^—Every na
tifcr are ranfoniing their subjects cxcept the
Americans, a number of whose brethren have
been right ycdfs in this city of bondage—
I havcjuft returned from a hard day's work."
A.special Peflion of the Suprume Court of
the .United States is now holding in this city.
\Te hear that the impoi tant qnellion will be
determined, whether it i'. compatible with the
principles of neutrality for the citizens of the
United States to enter 011 board French
crui:cr3.
A veflel is arrived at Boston, which left
Liverpool the firft ofJune; ft-.e brings no act
count of the capture of the Eritilh fleet—nor
any other intelligence of a later dare than has
been already publilbed.
A new City Directory Ujoft pnbiiihed by
.Mr. Dobson, corre&ed to-the prelent time-
Sold bjf the BoaliGellers generally, price five
eights of a dollar.
A JgJNT to tht CtmminJcr) Ships of
Wni-. ljF
YOU have now a fair opportunity ofdifpof
' V'gf of your prize money, «r part of it, to tru.
■iy charitable ptn pnfer Nun.berj of Jyouc.
~brethren ftom Cape-Franc^'-;,are in futFering
circomfta: ces, dsfpeiied thr£>i.gh the leveral
'cities and town? on tie 'Continent:; driven
to l'«»e their lire? from t!icir country by the
cruclliand ofnrxdcrom *ar and anarchy—
•Sorely theirdiftrefles d.-fcrve ccmmil'e.'ation
and relief!
This till is not intended to 'effrn rh.« cha
ritable donation' ofou' citze"-—wt-.r, •
fcfsr, their zet', i' liipii'j jrg the
wtntjnf thrift WftrelM Sra -ten.
Wlint i* a flat? as Wa«* f Ask rhe urfSr
ttinat?s tfoisi Cape-Fraucwß ? Luooire of the
the mertfiaoi-, the farfaersl of
C?-s?at : B itainbeijg'd thou lards add umis of
thousand . of the sons of indtittr y and ingenui
ty dmijiJld* from their looms, their
their manufacturing- ho life.— aot knowing
wnich way to turn or what to do : rhe ftreains
ot lupport are exhausted—their pockets tail
receiving their weekly families
are deftftute, then* children cry for b>ead t ifi
a land which perhaps the day btfo- e " ed
with milk and honey."—Lun human nature
con tern plate the fbe-.e without horror J But
it this sketch contains the brig; = f hdf- < : tie
medal, what must the ievej;fe be ? T.''c?'e arc
bus as the negative milcrie* 'y.i'war; though
in every commercial maftufaftu ir>g and agri
cultural court Cry, similar evils are inevitable*
Vet when we extend onr views to Irenes
where havoclepds the front, and farhinC clofcs
the i'ear, what an Sfcq-uifite edge is gfiteri to
our painful fenfarionw—can it lie pwiMb'e
that there-are-in. tiiis happy icob'ntry,-
being"? in the fiiape of men, who aciv\>t;ak3
measures etfa&ly calculated to plunge us into
tin? dreadful fit nation ?—Forbid it Heaven 1
There are a th.oufand particulars, fays a
correspondent, m which the circumstances of
the people of the United States are altered
for the better, in confecjuence of the opera
tions of the general government. J*et any
man of the least cantjor advei t to the-contraft
between the present lit nation of the mechanics
of the United State*, particularly in our sea*
ports, and what it was immediately preceding
the adoption of the NVw Conffctutioi —and A'
it does not produce emotions of patriotic gra
titude and pleasure, it mutt be owing p» the
want of every principle which enters into the
coinpofition of a good parent, or a good.citi-
2en.
ARRIVED at the POi< I aj F-HILADEIPiI [A.
Ship Wjlhinyon, Geor, Cayrntit
Bug Georgia Park t, Bariowt, Ch-»Utt.>n
Carolina,
Sch'r. Peggy, '
Sloop Driver,
Extratt cf a Utter from Neuj-York, dated Friday
morning July 19. J
44 News of the day is, That a privateer
which fa led frotn Bpitdn for
to £et a French commission, <xn her way t.ii
the;- took an English Ihip, which was retaken
and with the p'ivateer ca vied'into Halifax
bv a British cruiser, and the privateer's crew
harmed." •
Yefterelay arrived here the bri* Betft-y,
capt. Glsrk, of this port, from which "flje railed
some time ago, and arrived at St. Bartholo
mew's, where (he took in a cargo of coftee,
&c. failed for Hamburg, and on the iy't of
June, oil'the \Vefteril lil ind-, was'hoa; ded by
the French Xebeck privateer belonging to
NTanres, called the Saps Culottes, of teo
guns, 9 pounders,' and 100 men. The Com
mand? r of tH^ftrjgateel'. r?ior. r nnlt
'poffejlinn of the BetfeyJ' upon fufpiciori oF7;.?r
cargo being Dutch property. The Sans Cu
lot.tevhad captii'eda Pbituguezeb ig from
Opo to bound to Bremen, and the fb'; J Flora
ofGlaf:oW, laden with dry gond'- Jof Antigna.
and Jamaica, and had oo l*>ard 14 male nr.d
female paflengsr*-
Robestfoiv--*" "Stilus. The'F'loia~s ci go is
»a 1 nccl at C (.lurk part
ed with the privateeY ai d prize ten day*
about leagues from the coaft> bblli bound
to this port.
6 per Cir.tj, 18'"3
3 per C-nts, jcji "
Deferred, lt /i
full fharej Bank IT. S. 6 percent, adv«
(£5" Hal lam and He.nry beg leave to in
form jhctr friends and patron?, that they have
cnmpleat?d their Steam Ventilator* andfhuee
themselves the Theatre will be found lu-future
much cooler than any othp.r oubhc building m
Philadelphia. 1 ,* .•
New- Jersey, ) TVY virtue of 2 Writ to me
SuJJex Luunty.il. { J3 directed, ifTu<-d out of
ihe High Court of Chancery of New'.Jerfey, at
the suit of William Shipley against John Ming
and others ; I fhal! expose to faleat Public Ven
due, on the firth day of February next, between
thehouts of Twelve and five in the Aftcrq on
of the fame day, on the Prrmifcs, the following;
described Trad of Land, with its appurtenances,
fituatr in the Townfhip'of Oxford and 'County
of SulT x, beginning at a Chcfnut Oak Tree,cor
ner of Daniel Cox's land, and Handing in the
1 1 tie of a foimer survey mace to Thomas* Steven*
son, being vnatked wi h the letter B. and thcnce
extending along Coxc's line (firft) south fifty de
grees wrd filty-five chains and ftvenly-fivc link',
to a B ack-OakTree corner of Joseph Shi a pen's
land (second) fouih nine degrees and fiti.cn mi
nutes, w< ft mom chains and fixty-five -links 10
a fofked White-Oak Tree, masked wi;h the let
ters R and B another of the fa id Shippen's cor
ners (ilmd) thlnce norih eighty degree*,.caft one
hundred and forty-five chains, to a post on the
fnuthtily fide of Paquaofle-P iver,' belis» also a
corner of John Reading's land (fmi.th) thence
north Itmfy-r.iiYe degrees w« ft, one tiunrircd
and thi* tv-' wo cbains to the piace of beginning,
containing nine hundred and thirty acres with
iht usual allowance for toads and high ways-—
The f2me Premises are within v -;ht miles of the
Rivet D Uware ? andihere it thereon a tonveni
(tit Grift MfH with two- pa r «./ Sre>ne«V» Saw
Mill m ;;o«»d repair, V. iih a Efficient ft 1 cam of
water" for their use—a Dwelling floufe, Stoic
Honfe, and fcv« rai ffaatt build r.r s.
MARK THOMPSON,Sheriff.
Ddui d*y aj Jub, i7<j!f
Hm-Ttnk biarj.
SHIP NEWS.
G.iyola,
Gr.'i.y fb'jry,
Cai pt.ruer,
Skelly,
Wilson,
PRICE GF STOCKS.' -
ADVEK TI SEME N T. ~
Nt'.w Or-h'acs-
JJ, Cjjylina
' Ghfii Ir[t(in
Fort au Frmce