cuar. vi] TRADE RELATIONS AND CURRENCY 1159 doned the protection against foreign competition hitherto imposed for Colonial imports. As a matter of fact, the adoption of free trade had caused great dislocation of trade and commerce in Canada, which was not removed until the repeal of the navigation laws threw open the St. Lawrence to the flags of the world. The Australian Colonies on their birth were given power to raise customs duties! subject, however, to the proviso that they should not be contrary to treaty, or differential, or imposed on goods for the use of the Imperial forces in the Colony, which was a natural rule, as the Imperial Government had to defray the cost of the garrisons, and could hardly be expected to pay duties on the goods which they imported to feed and clothe the troops. In the case of the four South African Colonies no limitations were imposed on their powers with regard to customs duties when self-government was accorded, nor was New Zealand fettered in 1852,% except by the provision that duties must not be contrary to treaty, or be levied on goods for the troops or naval forces. Newfoundland received the benefit of the Act regarding Canadian provinces of 1846. A further development of the doctrine was seen when the Colonies began to abandon the Crown Colony policy of levying duties solely for revenue purposes and to pass a protective tariff. In 1859 the Governor of Canada sent home a dispatch forwarding an Act imposing very heavy duties ; the Secretary of State replied asking him to bring before his ministers a protest from the Chamber of Commerce at Sheffield calling attention to the damage which would result from such duties to trade in the United Kingdom.®? He called attention to the fact that such heavy duties were practically in favour of the trade of the United States, in view of the large facilities for smuggling granted by the long frontier between Canada and the States. He added that when an authenticated copy ' 13 & 14 Vict. c. 59, ss. 27 and 31. The requirement of reservation i 5 & 6 Viet. c. 76, s. 31, was repealed by 29 & 30 Viet. c. 74, for which cf. Blackmore, Constitution of South Australia, pp. 69, 70. * 15 & 16 Viet. c. 72, s. 61. * Parl, Pap., H. C. 400, 1864, pp. 7 seq.