Translation.
Without date.
Sir,
I have the honor to transmit you a Memorial from the Council and Assembly of the Island of Dominica, who lay claim to the Dutch ship Resolution, Captain Waterburg, which has been retaken from an English privateer from Carolina, by the American privateer Ariel, belonging to Messrs Robert Morris, Samuel Inglis, and William Bingham, brought into Philadelphia, and condemned there as a legal prize.
This neutral ship, employed in the exportation of the produce of Dominica by virtue of the proclamation of his Britannic Majesty in favor of neutral ships bound for the British Colonies, conquered by France in the course of this war, would not have been condemned as a legal prize, had it remained in the power of the British privateer, and been brought into a port belonging to his Britannic Majesty. She could not, then, be condemned by the Admiralty of Philadelphia, since that Court could not consider her otherwise than as a neutral vessel, sailing under the faith of his Britannic Majesty's proclamation, which the commander of the English privateer was no doubt ignorant of, and after which she could no longer be considered as a recapture.
This affair, Sir, deserves all your attention, and the particular protection which I request you to grant it, that the owners of this vessel may obtain, from the Council of Prizes of the United States the justice due to them.
It is feared at Dominica, lest the Ostendian ship Eeirsten, Captain Thomson, which sailed for the said Island, and was taken by an American privateer and brought into Boston, may likewise have been condemned; and should this have been the case, I also request your interposition in favor of the owners of the said vessel.
I have the honor to be, &c.
BOUILLÉ.