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Treaty
of Amity and Commerce
The
most Christian King, and the thirteen United States of North America, to
wit, New Hampshire, Massachusetts Bay, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New
York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania Delaware, Maryland, Virginia
North-Carolina, South Carolina & Georgia, willing to fix in an
equitable and permanent manner the Rules which ought to be followed
relative to the Correspondence & Commerce which the two Parties
desire to establish between their respective Countries, States, and
Subjects, hi most Christian Majesty and the, said United States have
judged that the said End could not b, better obtained than by taking for
the Basis of their Agreement the most perfect Equality and Reciprocity,
and by carefully avoiding all those burthensome Preferences, which are
usually Sources of Debate, Embarrassment and Discontent; by leaving also
each Party at Liberty to make, respecting Commerce and Navigation, those
interior Regulations which it shall find most convenient to itself; and
by founding the Advantage of Commerce solely upon reciprocal Utility, and
the just Rules of free Intercourse; reserving withal to each Party the
Liberty of admitting at its pleasure other Nations to a Participation of
the same Advantages. It is in the Spirit of this Intention, and to fulfill
these Views, that his said Majesty having named and appointed for
his Plenipotentiary Conrad Alexander Gerard, Royal Sindic of the
City of Strasbourg, Secretary of his Majesty's Council of State, and the
United States on their Part, having fully impower'd Benjamin Franklin
Deputy from the State of Pennsylvania to the general Congress, and
President of the Convention of said State, Silas Deane late Deputy from
the State of Connecticut to the said Congress, and Arthur Lee Councilor at Law; The said respective Plenipotentiaries after exchanging their
Powers, and after mature Deliberation, have concluded and agreed upon the
following Articles.
There
shall be a firm, inviolable and universal Peace, and a true and sincere
Friendship between the most Christian King, his Heirs and Successors, and
the United States of America; and the Subjects of the most Christian King
and of the said States; and between the Countries, Islands, Cities, and
Towns, situate under the Jurisdiction of the most Christian King, and of
the said United States, and the people and Inhabitants of every Degree,
without exception of Persons or Places; & the Terms herein after
mentioned shall be perpetual between the most Christian King his Heirs
and Successors and the said United States.
The
most Christian King, and the United States engage mutually not to grant
any particular Favor to other Nations in respect of Commerce and
Navigation, which shall not immediately become common to the other Party,
who shall enjoy the same Favor freely, if the Concession was freer made,
or on allowing the same Compensation, if the Concession was Conditional.
The
Subjects of the most Christian King shall pay in the Port Havens, Roads,
Countries I lands, Cities or Towns, of the United States or any of them,
no other or greater Duties or Imposts of what Nature soever they may be,
or by what Name soever called, than those which the Nations most favoured
are or shall be obliged to pay; and they shall enjoy all the Rights,
Liberties, Privileges, Immunities and Exemptions in Trade, Navigation and
Commerce, whether in passing from one Port in the said States to another,
or in going to and from the same, from and to any Part of the World,
which the said Nations do or shall enjoy.
The
Subjects, People and Inhabitants of the said United States, and each of
them, shall not pay in the Ports, Havens Roads Isles, Cities & Places
under the Domination of his most Christian Majesty in Europe, any other
or greater Duties or Imposts, of what Nature soever, they may be, or by
what Name soever called, that those which the most favoured Nations are
or shall be obliged to pay; & they shall enjoy all the Rights,
Liberties, Privileges, Immunities & Exemptions, in Trade Navigation
and Commerce whether in passing from one Port in the said Dominions in
Europe to another, or in going to and from the same, from and to any Part
of the World, which the said Nation do or shall enjoy.
In
the above Exemption is particularly comprised the Imposition of 100 Sols
pr Ton, established in France on foreign Ships; unless when the Ships of
the United States shall load with the Merchandize of France for another
Port of the same Dominion, in which Case the said Ships shall pay the
Duty abovementioned so long as other Nations the most favour'd shall be
obliged to pay it. But it is understood that the said United States or
any of them are at Liberty when they shall judge it proper, to establish
a Duty equivalent in the same Case.
The
most Christian King shall endeavour by all the means in his Power to
protect and defend all Vessels and the Effects belonging to the Subjects,
People or Inhabitants of the said United States, or any of them, being in
his Ports Havens or Roads or on the Sea near to his Countries, Islands
Cities or Towns and to recover and restore to the right owners, their
agents or Attorneys all such Vessel & Effects, which shall be taken
within his Jurisdiction; and the Ships of War of his most Christian
Majesty or any Convoys sailing under his authority shall upon all
Occasions take under their Protection all Vessels belonging to the
Subjects, People or Inhabitants of the said United States, or any of them
& holding the same Course or going the same Way, and shall defend
such Vessels, as long as they hold the same Course or go the same way,
against all Attacks, Force and Violence in the same manner, as they ought
to protect and defend the Vessels belonging to the Subjects of the most
Christian King.
In
like manner the said United States and their Ships of War sailing under
their Authority shall protect and defend, conformable to the Tenor of the
preceding Article, all the Vessels and Effect belonging to the Subjects
of the most Christian King; and use al their Endeavours to recover cause
to be restored the said Vessels and Effects, that shall have been taken
within the Jurisdiction of the said United State or any of them.
The
most Christian King will employ his good Offices and Interposition with
the King or Emperor of Morocco or Fez, the Regencies of Algier, Tunis and
Tripoli, or with any of them, and also with every other Prince, State or
Power of the Coast of Barbary in Africa, and the Subjects of the said
King Emperor, States and Powers, and each of them; in order to provide as
fully and efficaciously as possible for the Benefit, Conveniency and
Safety of the said United States, and each of them, their Subjects,
People, and Inhabitants, and their Vessels and Effects, against all
Violence, Insult, Attacks, or Depredations on the Part of the said
Princes and States of Barbary, or their Subjects.
The
Subjects, Inhabitants, Merchants, Commanders of Ships Masters and
Mariners of the States, Provinces, and Dominions of each Party
respectively shall abstain and forbear to fish in all Places possessed or
which shall be possessed by the other Party: The most Christian Kings
Subjects shall not fish in the Havens, Bays, Creeks, Roads Coasts or
Places, which the said united States hold or shall hereafter hold; and in
like manner the Subjects, People and Inhabitants of the said United
States shall not fish in the Havens Bays, Creeks, Roads, Coasts or
Places, which the most Christian King possesses or shall hereafter
possess; and if any and if any Ship or Vessel shall be found fishing
contrary to the Tenor of this Treaty, the said Ship or Vessel with its
lading, proof being made thereof, shall be confiscated. It is however
understood, that the Exclusion stipulated in the present Article shall
take place only so long, and so far as the most Christian King or the
United States shall not in this respect have granted an Exemption to some
other Nation.
The
United States their Citizens and Inhabitants shall never disturb the
Subjects, of the most Christian King in the Enjoyment and Exercise of the
Right of Fishing on the Banks of Newfoundland; nor in the indefinite and
exclusive Right which belongs to them on that Part of the Coast of that
Island which is designed by the Treaty of Utrecht; nor in the Rights
relative to all and each of the Isles which belong to his most Christian
Majesty; the whole conformable to the true Sense of the Treaties of Utrecht
and Paris.
It
is agreed and concluded that there shall never be any Duty imposed on the
Exportation of the Mellasses that may be taken by the Subjects of any of
the United States from the Islands of America which belong or may
hereafter appertain to his most Christian
Majesty.
In
compensation of the Exemption stipulated by the preceding Article, it is
agreed and concluded that there shall never be any Duties imposed on the
Exportation of any kind of Merchandize which the Subjects of his most
Christian Majesty may take from the Countries and Possessions present or
future of any of the thirteen United States, for the Use of the Islands
which shall furnish Mellasses.
The
Subjects and Inhabitants of the said United States, or any one of them,
shall not be reputed Aubains in France, & consequently shall be
exempted from the Droit d'Aubaine or other similar Duty under what
name soever. They may by Testament, Donation, or otherwise dispose of
their Goods moveable and immoveable in favour of such Persons as to them
shall seem good; and their Heirs, Subjects of the Said United States,
residing whether in France or elsewhere, may succeed them ab intestat,
without being obliged to obtain Letters of Naturalization, and without
having the Effect of this Concession contested or impeded under Pretext
of any Rights or Prerogatives of Provinces, Cities, or Private Persons.
And the said Heirs, whether such by particular Title, or ab intestat,
shall be exempt from all Duty called Droit de Detraction, or other
Duty of the same kind; saving nevertheless, the local Rights or Duties as
much and as long as similar ones are not established by the United States
or any of them. The Subjects of the most Christian fling shall enjoy on
their Part, in all the Dominions of the sd. States, an entire and perfect
Reciprocity relative to the Stipulations contained in the present
Article.
But
it is at the same Time agreed that its Contents shall not affect the Laws
made or that may be made hereafter in France against Emigrations, which
shall remain in all their Force and Vigour; and the United States on
their Part, or any of them, shall be at Liberty to enact such Laws
relative to that Matter, as to them shall seem proper.
The
merchant Ships of either of the Parties, which shall be making into a
Port belonging to the Enemy of the other Ally and concerning whose Voyage
& the Species of Goods on board her there shall be just Grounds of
Suspicion shall be obliged to exhibit as well upon the high Seas as in
the Ports and Havens not only her Passports, but likewise Certificates
expressly strewing that her Goods are not of the Number of those, which
have been prohibited as contraband
If
by the exhibiting of the above said Certificates, the other Party
discover there are any of those Sorts of Goods, which are prohibited and
declared contraband and consigned for a Port under the Obedience of his
Enemies, it shall not be lawful to break up the Hatches of such Ship, or
to open any Chest, Coffers, Packs, Casks, or any other Vessels found
therein, or to remove the smallest Parcels of her Goods, whether such
Ship belongs to the Subjects of France or the Inhabitants of the said
United States, unless the lading be brought on Shore in the presence of
the Officers of the Court of Admiralty and an Inventory thereof made; but
there shall be no allowance to sell, exchange, or alienate the same in
any manner until after that due and lawful Process shall have been had
against such prohibited Goods and the Court of Admiralty shall by a
Sentence pronounced, have confiscated the same: saving always as well the
Ship itself as any other Goods found therein, which by this Treaty are to
be esteemed free: neither may they be detained on presence of their being
as it were infected by the prohibited Goods, much less shall they be
confiscated as lawful Prize: But if not the whole Cargo, but only part
thereof shall consist of prohibited or contraband Goods and the Commander
of the Ship shall be ready and willing to deliver them to the Captor, who
has discovered them, in such Case the Captor having received those Goods
shall forthwith discharge the Ship and not hinder her by any means freely
to prosecute the Voyage, on which she was bound. But in Case the
Contraband Merchandises, cannot be all receiv'd on board the Vessel of
the Captor, then the Captor may, notwithstanding the Offer of delivering
him the Contraband Goods, carry the Vessel into the nearest Port agreeable
to what is above directed.
On
the contrary it is agreed, that whatever shall be found to be laden by
the Subjects and Inhabitants of either Party on any Ship belonging to the
Enemies of the other or to their Subjects, the whole although it be not of
the Sort of prohibited Goods may be confiscated in the same manner, as if
it belonged to the Enemy, except such Goods and Merchandizes as were put
on board such Ship before the Declaration of War, or even after such
Declaration, if so be it were done without knowledge of such Declaration.
So that the Goods of the Subjects and People of either Party, whether
they be of the Nature of such as are prohibited or otherwise, which, as
is aforesaid were put on board any Ship belonging to an Enemy before the
War, or after the Declaration of the same, without the knowledge of it,
shall no ways be liable to confiscation, but shall well and truly be
restored without Delay to the proprietors demanding the same; but so as
that, if the said Merchandizes be contraband, it shall not be any Ways
lawful to carry them afterwards to any Ports belonging to the Enemy. The
two contracting Parties agree, that the Term of two Months being passed
after the Declaration of War, their respective Subjects, from whatever
Part of the World they come, shall not plead the Ignorance mentioned in
this Article.
And
that more effectual Care may be taken for the Security of the Subjects
and Inhabitants of both Parties, that they suffer no injury by the men of
War or Privateers of the other Party, all the Commanders of the Ships of
his most Christian Majesty & of the said United States and all their
Subjects and Inhabitants shall be forbid doing any Injury or Damage to
the other Side; and if they act to the contrary, they shall be punished
and shall moreover be bound to make Satisfaction for all Matter of
Damage, and the Interest thereof, by reparation, under the Pain and
obligation of their Person and Goods.
All
Ships and Merchandizes of what Nature soever which shall be rescued out
of the hands of any Pirates or Robbers on the high Seas, shall be brought
into some Port of either State and shall be delivered to the Custody of
the Officers of that Port, in order to be restored entire to the true
Proprietor, as soon as due and sufficient Proof shall be made concerning
the Property thereof.
It
shall be lawful for the Ships of War of either Party & Privateers
freely to carry whithersoever they please the Ships and Goods taken from
their Enemies, without being obliged to pay any Duty to the Officers of
the Admiralty or any other Judges; nor shall such Prizes be arrested or
seized, when they come to and enter the Ports of either Party; nor shall
the Searchers or other Officers of those Places search the same or make
examination concerning the lawfulness of such Prizes, but they may hoist
Sail at any time and depart and carry their Prizes to the Places
express'd in their Commissions, which the Commanders of such Ships of War
shall be obliged to shew: On the contrary no Shelter or Refuge shall be
given in their Ports to such as shall have made Prize of the Subjects,
People or Property of either of the Parties; but if such shall come in,
being forced by Stress of Weather or the Danger of the Sea, all proper
means shall be vigorously used that they go out and retire from thence as
soon as possible.
If
any Ship belonging to either of the Parties their People or Subjects,
shall, within the Coasts or Dominions of the other, stick upon the Sands
or be wrecked or suffer any other Damage, all friendly Assistance and
Relief shall be given to the Persons shipwrecked or such as shall be in
danger thereof; and Letters of safe Conduct shall likewise be given to
them for their free and quiet Passage from thence, and the return of
every one to his own Country.
In
Case the Subjects and Inhabitants of either Party with their shipping
whether publick and of War or private and of Merchants, be forced,
through Stress of Weather, pursuit of Pirates or Enemies, or any other
urgent necessity for seeking of Shelter and Harbour, to retreat and enter
into any of the Rivers, Bays, Roads or Ports belonging to the other
Party, they shall be received and treated with all humanity and Kindness
and enjoy all friendly Protection & Help; and they shall be permitted
to refresh and provide themselves at reasonable Rates with victuals and
all things needful for the sustenance of their Persons or reparation of
their Ships and conveniency of their Voyage; and they shall no Ways be
detained or hindred from returning out of the said Ports or Roads but may
remove and depart when and whither they please without any let or
hindrance.
For
the better promoting of Commerce on both Sides, it is agreed that if a
War shall break out between the said two Nations, six Months after the
Proclamation of War shall be allowed to the Merchants in the Cities and
Towns, where they live, for selling and transporting their Goods and
Merchandizes; and if any thing be taken from them, or any Injury be done
them within that Term by either Party or the People or Subjects of
either, full Satisfaction shall be made for the same.
No
Subjects of the most Christian King shall apply for or take any
Commission or Letters of marque for arming any Ship or Ships to act as
Privateers against the said United States or any of them or against the
Subjects People or Inhabitants of the said United States or any of them
or against the Property of any of the Inhabitants of any of them from
any Prince or State with which the said United States shall be at War.
Nor shall any Citizen Subject or Inhabitant of the said United States or
any of them apply for or take any Commission or letters of marque for
arming any Ship or Ships to act as Privateers against the Subjects O f
the most Christian King or any of them or the Property of any of them
from any Prince or State with which the said fling shall be at War: And
if any Person of either Nation shall take such Commissions or Letters of
Marque he shall be punished as a Pirate.
It
shall not be lawful for any foreign Privateers, not belonging to
Subjects of the most Christian King nor Citizens of the said United
States, who have Commissions from any other Prince or State in enmity
with either Nation to fit their Ships in the Ports of either the one or
the other of the aforesaid Parties, to sell what they have taken or in
any other manner whatsoever to exchange their Ships, Merchandizes or any
other lading; neither shall they be allowed even to purchase victuals
except such as shall be necessary for their going to the next Port of
that Prince or State from which they have Commissions.
It
shall be lawful for all and singular the Subjects of the most Christian
King and the Citizens People and Inhabitants of the said United States
to sail with their Ships with all manner of Liberty and Security; no
distinction being made, who are the Proprietors of the Merchandizes
laden thereon, from any Port to the places of those who now are or
hereafter shall be at Enmity with the most Christian King or the United
States. It shall likewise be Lawful for the Subjects and Inhabitants
aforesaid to sail with the Ships and Merchandizes aforementioned and to
trade with the same Liberty and. security from the Places, Ports and
Havens of those who are Enemies of both or either Party without any
Opposition or disturbance whatsoever, not only directly from the Places
of the Enemy afore mentioned to neutral Places; but also from one Place
belonging to an Enemy to another place belonging to an Enemy, whether
they be under the Jurisdiction of the same Prince or under several; And
it is hereby stipulated that free Ships shall also give a freedom to
Goods, and that every thing shall be deemed to be free and exempt, which
shall be found on board the Ships belonging to the Subjects of either of
the Confederates, although the whole lading or any Part thereof should
appertain to the Enemies of either, contraband Goods being always
excepted. It is also agreed !' in like manner that the same Liberty be
extended to Persons, who are on board a free Ship, with this Effect,
that although they be Enemies to both or either Party, they are not to
be taken out of that free Ship, unless they are Soldiers and in actual
Service of the Enemies.
This
Liberty of Navigation and Commerce shall extend to all kinds of
Merchandizes, excepting those only which are distinguished by the name
of contraband; And under this Name of Contraband or prohibited Goods
shall be comprehended, Arms, great Guns, Bombs with the fuzes, and other
things belonging to them, Cannon Ball, Gun powder, Match, Pikes, Swords,
Lances, Spears, halberds, Mortars, Petards, Granades Salt Petre,
Muskets, Musket Ball, Bucklers, Helmets, breast Plates, Coats of Mail
and the like kinds of Arms proper for arming Soldiers, Musket rests,
belts, Horses with their Furniture, and all other Warlike Instruments
whatever. These Merchandizes which follow shall not be reckoned among
Contraband or prohibited Goods, that is to say, all sorts of Cloths, and
all other Manufactures woven of any wool, Flax, Silk, Cotton or any
other Materials whatever; all kinds of wearing Apparel together with the
Species, whereof they are used to be made; gold & Silver as well
coined as uncoin'd, Tin, Iron, Latten, Copper, Brass Coals, as also
Wheat and Barley and any other kind of Corn and pulse; Tobacco and
likewise all manner of Spices; salted and smoked Flesh, salted Fish,
Cheese and Butter, Beer, Oils, Wines, Sugars and all sorts of Salts;
& in general all Provisions, which serve for the nourishment of
Mankind and the sustenance of Life; Furthermore all kinds of Cotton,
hemp, Flax, Tar, Pitch, Ropes, Cables, Sails, Sail Cloths, Anchors and
any Parts of Anchors; also Ships Masts, Planks, Boards and Beams of what
Trees soever; and all other Things proper either for building or
repairing Ships, and all d other Goods whatever, which have not been
worked into the form of any Instrument or thing prepared for War by Land
or by Sea, shall not be reputed Contraband, much less such as d have
been already wrought and made up for any other Use; all which shall be
wholly reckoned among free Goods: as likewise I all other Merchandizes
and things, which are not comprehended and particularly mentioned in the
foregoing enumeration of contraband Goods: so that they may be
transported and carried in the freest manner by Subjects of both
Confederates even to Places belonging to an Enemy such Towns or Places
being only excepted as are at that time beseiged, blocked up or
invested.
To
the End that all manner of Dissentions and Quarrels may be avoided and
prevented on one Side and the other, it is agreed, that in case either
of the Parties hereto should be engaged in War, the Ships and Vessels
belonging to the Subjects or People of the other Ally must be furnished
with Sea Letters or Passports expressing the name, Property and Bulk of
the Ship as also the name and Place of habitation of the Master or
Commander of the said Ship, that it may appear thereby, that the Ship
really & truly belongs to the Subjects of one of the Parties, which
Passport shall be made out and granted according to the Form annexed to
this Treaty; they shall likewise be recalled every Year, that is if the
Ship happens to return home within the Space of a Year. It is likewise
agreed, that such Ships being laden are to be provided not only with
Passports as above mentioned, but also with Certificates containing the
several Particulars of the Cargo, the Place whence the Ship sailed and
whither she is bound, that so it may be known,. whether any forbidden or
contraband Goods be on board the same: which Certificates shall be made
out by the Officers of the Place, whence the Ship set sail, in the
accustomed Form. And if any one shall think it fit or advisable to
express in the said Certificates the Person to whom the Goods on board
belong, he may freely do so.
The
Ships of the Subjects and Inhabitants of either of the Parties, coming
upon any Coasts belonging to either of the said, Allies, but not willing
to enter into Port, or being entered into Port and not willing to unload
their Cargoes or break Bulk, they shall be treated according to the
general Rules prescribed or to be prescribed relative to the Object in
Question.
If
the Ships of the said Subjects, People or Inhabitants of either of the
Parties shall be met with either sailing along the Coasts or on the high
Seas by any Ship of War of the other or by any Privateers, the said
Ships of War or Privateers, for the avoiding of any Disorder shall
remain out of Cannon Shot, and may send their Boats aboard the Merchant
Ship, which they shall so meet with, and may enter her to number of two
or three Men only to whom the Master or Commander of such Ship or Vessel
hall exhibit his passport concerning the Property of the Ship made out
according to the Form inserted in this present Treaty, and the Ship,
when she shall have shewed such Passport shall be free and st Libert, to
pursue her Voyage, so as it shall not be lawful to molest or search her
in any manner or to give her chase, or force her to quit her intended
It
is also agreed that all Goods, when once put on board the Ships or
Vessels of either of the two contracting Parties shall be subject to no
farther Visitation; but all Visitation or Search shall be made before
hand, and all prohibited Goods shall be stopped on the Spot, before the
same be put on board, unless there are manifest Tokens or Proofs of
fraudulent Practice; nor shall either the Persons or goods of the
Subjects of his most Christian Majesty or the United States be put under
any arrest or molested by any other kind of Embargo for that Cause; and
only the Subject of that State, to whom the said; Goods have been or
shall be prohibited and who shall presume to sell or alienate such sort
of Goods shall be duly punished for the Offense
The
two contracting Parties grant mutually the Liberty of having each in the
Ports of the other, Consuls, Vice Consuls, Agents and Commissaries,
whose; Functions shall be regulated by a particular Agreement.
And
the more to favour and facilitate the Commerce which the Subjects of the
United States may have with France, the most Christian King will grant
them in Europe one or more free Ports, where they may bring and dispose
of all the Produce and Merchandize of the thirteen United States; and
his Majesty will also continue to the Subjects of the said States, the
free Ports which have been and are open in the French Islands of
America. Of all which free Ports, the said Subjects of the United States
shall enjoy the Use, agreeable to the Regulations which relate to them.
The
present Treaty shall be ratified on both Sides and the Ratifications
shall be exchanged in the Space of Six Months, or sooner if possible.
In
Faith whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the above
Articles, both in the French and English Languages, declaring
nevertheless that the present Treaty was originally composed and
concluded in the French Language, and they have thereto affixed their
Seals.
Done
at Paris, this Sixth Day of February, one thousand seven hundred &
seventy eight
C.
A. GERARD B FRANKLIN SILAS DEANE ARTHUR LEE
[Seal]
[Seal] [Seal] [Seal]
Notes:
(1)
Article 11 was suppressed.
(2)
Article 12 was suppressed.
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