[289] Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, and Virginia.
[290] Connecticut, Pennsylvania, and Maryland.
[291] New Hampshire.
[292] Rhode Island.
[293] North Carolina.
[294] Delaware, South Carolina, and Georgia.
[295] See a report made in Congress, March 3, 1786. Journals, XI. 41.
[296] The Duke of Dorset, the English Ambassador at Paris, wrote to the commissioners (March 26, 1785) as follows: "Having communicated to my court the readiness you expressed in your letter to me of the 9th of December to remove to London, for the purpose of treating upon such points as may materially concern the interests, both political and commercial, of Great Britain and America; and having at the same time represented that you declared yourselves to be fully authorized and empowered to negotiate, I have been, in answer thereto, instructed to learn from you, gentlemen, what is the real nature of the powers with which you are invested,—whether you are merely commissioned by Congress, or whether you have received separate powers from the respective States. A committee of North American merchants have waited upon his Majesty's principal Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, to express how anxiously they wished to be informed upon this subject; repeated experience having taught them in particular, as well as the public in general, how little the authority of Congress could avail in any respect, where the interest of any one individual State was even concerned, and particularly so where the concerns of that State might be supposed to militate against such resolutions as Congress might think proper to adopt. The apparent determination of the respective States to regulate their own separate interests renders it absolutely necessary, towards forming a permanent system of commerce, that my court should be informed how far the commissioners can be duly authorized to enter into any engagements with Great Britain, which it may not be in the power of any one of the States to render totally fruitless and ineffectual." Diplomatic Correspondence, II. 297.
[297] Jefferson's Works, I. 50, 51. The whole proceedings of this commission may be found in the Diplomatic Correspondence, II. 193-346.
[298] October 15, 1777. Secret Journals, I. 328.