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         “It
        throws thirteen colonies out of the royal protection, levels all
        distinctions, and makes us independent in spite of our supplications and
        entreaties... It may be fortunate that the act of independency should
        come from the British Parliament rather than the American Congress.”
          —John
        Adams on the American Prohibitory Act 
        “That
        as to the king, we had been bound to him by allegiance, but that this
        bond was now dissolved by his assent to the late Act of Parliament by
        which he declares us out of his protection.” 
        —from
        “Proceedings from the Second Continental 
        Congress” (referring to the American Prohibitory Act) 
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         [American
        Prohibitory Act] London: Charles Eyre and William Strahan, Printers to
        the King’s Most Excellent Majesty, 1776. 16 Anno Regni Georgii III,
        cap 5. Complete volume. Volume also contains two additional acts
        relevant to the American Revolution, “An Act punishing Mutiny and
        Desertion” and “An Act to enable His Majesty…to call out and
        assemble militia in all cases of rebellion.” Full contemporary calf,
        red leather spine label, bookplate of Rt. Honourable Earl of Portsmouth.
        A few stray scrapes to binding, light occasional wear. Overall very
        attractive in contemporary binding. $12,500. 
        First
        printing. The American Prohibitory Act of 1776 prohibited the American
        colonies from “all manner of trade and commerce” and declared that
        any ships found trading “shall be forfeited to his Majesty, as if the
        same were the ships and effects of open enemies.” This fateful Act
        declared all Americans to be outlaws beyond the king’s protection even
        while conservative American leaders were working with their British
        counterparts to craft a settlement to present to the King and Parliament
        that would end the fighting between colonial and royal forces, protect
        the colonists from unconstitutional parliamentary legislation while at
        the same time stopping short of a declaration of independence.  
        The
        American Prohibitory Act ended any chance for reconciliation. The
        following excerpt illustrates the importance of this act to American
        history. The excerpt is from a letter written in early 1776 by Joseph
        Hewes, a North Carolina merchant and, as of December 1775, a prominent
        opponent of independence: “The Act of Parliament prohibiting all trade
        and commerce between Great Britain and the colonies has been lately
        brought here by a Mr. Temple from London... I fear it will make the
        breach between the two countries so wide as never more to be
        reconciled... I see no prospect of reconciliation. Nothing is left now
        but to fight it out” (letter to Samuel Johnston, dated March 20, 1776,
        reprinted in English Historical Documents, volume IX, pp 863.) While it
        was Thomas Paine’s Common Sense that proved crucial in mobilizing
        public opinion in favor of independence, no document played a more
        decisive role in the debate over independence at the Second Continental
        Congress than the American Prohibitory Act.  |