Page:American History Told by Contemporaries, v2.djvu/155

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PART III
COLONIAL GOVERNMENT



CHAPTER VII — PRINCIPLES OF ENGLISH CONTROL



45. Extracts from a Navigation Act (1695/6)
BY THE PARLIAMENT OF ENGLAND


This is one of a series of statutes regulating colonial trade. See below, Nos. 87, 146. — Bibliography: Winsor, Narrative and Critical History, VI, 62-65; Channing and Hart, Guide, §§ 133, 147; Contemporaries, I, 185, 240, 462.


AN ACT for preventing Frauds and regulating Abuses in the Plantation Trade.

[I.] . . . That after the Five and twentieth Day of March One thousand six hundred ninety eight noe Goods or Merchandizes whatsoever shall bee imported into or exported out of any Colony or Plantation to His Majesty in Asia Africa or America belonging or in his Possession or which may hereafter belong unto or bee in the Possession of His Majesty His Heires or Successors or shall bee laden in or carried from any One Port or Place in the said Colonies or Plantations to any other Port or Place in the same, the Kingdome of England Dominion of Wales or Towne of Berwick upon Tweed in any Shipp or Bottome but what is or shall bee of the Built of England or of the Built of Ireland or the said Colonies or Plantations and wholly owned by the People thereof or any of them and navigated with the Masters and Three Fourths of the Mariners of the said Places onely (except such Shipps onely as are or shall bee taken Prize and Condemnation thereof made in one of the Courts of Admiralty in England Ireland or the said Colonies or Plantations [to bee navigated by the Master and Three Fourths of the

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