17 Essays ;
increase of our trade to those colonies, I refer to the
accounts frequently laid before Parliament by the
officers of the customs, and to the custom-house
books; from which I have also selected one account,
that of the trade from England, exclusive of Scot-
land, to Pennsylvania *; a colony most remarkable
for the plain, frugal manner of living of its inhabit-
ants, and the most suspected of carrying on manu-
factures, on account of the number of German
artisans who are known to have transplanted them-
selves into that country; though even these, in truth,
when they come there, generally apply themselves
to agriculture, as the surest support and most ad-
vantageous employment.
By this account it appears, that the exports to
that province have, in twenty-eight years, increased
nearly in the proportion of seventeen to one; whereas
the people themselves, who by other authentic ac-
counts appear to double their numbers (the strangers
who settle there included) in about sixteen years,
* An Account of the Value of the Exports from England to Pennsyl-
vania in one Year, taken at different Periods, viz.
In 1723 they amounted only to £15,992 1
1730 they were 48,592 i
1737 . y 56,690 7
1742 : 75,295 4
1747 82,404
1752 201,666 =
1757 . 268,426 oJ 6
N. B.—The accounts for 1758 and 1759 were not then completed;
but those acquainted with the North American trade know that the
increase in those two years had been in a still greater proportion, the
last year being supposed to exceed any former year by a third; and
this owing to the increased ability of the people to spend, from the
oreater quantities of money circulating among them by the war.
0] 55