Benjamin Franklin [1760 ings, rents, and the value of land and of the produce of land; even if he goes back no farther than is within man’s memory. Let him compare those countries with others on the same island, where manufactures have not yet extended themselves; observe the present difference, and reflect how much greater our strength may be, if numbers give strength, when our manufactures shall occupy every part of the island where they can possibly be subsisted. But, say the objectors, “there is a certain distance from the sea, in America, beyond which the expense of carriage will put a stop to the sale and consump- tion of your manufactures; and this, with the diffi- culty of making returns for them, will oblige the in- habitants to manufacture for themselves; of course, if you suffer your people to extend their settle- ments beyond that distance, your people become useless to you’’; and this distance is limited by some to two hundred miles, by others to the Appalachian mountains. Not to insist on a plain truth, that no part of a dominion from whence a government may on occa- sion draw supplies and aids both of men and money (though at too great a distance to be supplied with manufactures from some other part) is therefore to be deemed useless to the whole, I shall endeavour to show that these imaginary limits of utility, even in point of commerce, are much too narrow. The in- land parts of the continent of Europe are farther from the sea than the limits of settlement proposed for America. Germany is full of tradesmen and artificers of all kinds, and the governments there, 40