ROBERT MORRIS.
CIRCULAR TO THE GOVERNORS OF THE STATES.
Philadelphia, July 25th, 1781.
Sir,
I had the honor to write to you on the —— instant, enclosing a certified copy of the account of your State, as it stands in the treasury books of the United States. I now pray leave to recall your attention to it.
It gives me great pain to learn, that there is a pernicious idea prevalent among some of the States that their accounts are not to be adjusted with the continent. Such an idea cannot fail to spread listless languor over all our operations. To suppose this expensive war can be carried on without joint and strenuous efforts, is beneath the wisdom of those who are called to the high offices of legislation. Those who inculcate maxims, which tend to relax these efforts, most certainly injure the common cause, whatever may be the motives which inspire their conduct. If once an opinion is admitted, that those States who do the least and charge most will derive the greatest benefit, and endure the smallest evils; your Excellency must perceive that shameless inactivity must take the place of that noble emulation, which ought to pervade and animate the whole Union. It is my particular duty, while I remind my fellow citizens of the tasks, which it is incumbent on them to perform, to remove, if I can, every impediment which lies in the way, or which may have been raised by disaffection, self interest, or mistake. I take, therefore, this early opportunity to assure you, that all the accounts of the several States with the United States, shall be speedily liquidated if I can possibly effect it, and my efforts for that purpose shall be unceasing. I make this assurance in the most solemn manner, and I entreat that the consequences of a contrary assertion may be most seriously weighed and considered, before it is made or believed.
These accounts naturally divide themselves into two considerable branches, viz. those which are subsequent to the resolutions of Congress of the 18th of March, 1780.[37] The former must be adjusted as soon as proper officers can be found and appointed for the purpose, and proper principles established so as that they may be liquidated in an equitable manner. I say, Sir, in an equitable manner, for I am determined that justice shall be the rule of my conduct, as far as the measure of abilities, which the Almighty has been pleased to bestow, shall enable me to distinguish between right and wrong. I shall never permit a doubt, that the States will do what is right; neither will I ever believe that any one of them can expect to derive advantage from doing what is wrong. It is by being just to individuals, to each other, to the Union, to all; by generous grants of solid revenue, and by adopting energetic methods to collect that revenue; and not by complainings, vauntings, or recriminations, that these States must expect to establish their independence and rise into power, consequence and grandeur. I speak to your Excellency with freedom, because it is my duty so to speak, and because I am convinced that the language of plain sincerity is the only proper language to the first magistrate of a free community.
The accounts I have mentioned as subsequent to the resolutions of the 18th of March, 1780, admit of an immediate settlement. The several States have all the necessary materials. One side of this account consists of demands made by resolutions of Congress, long since forwarded; the other must consist of the compliances with those demands. This latter part I am not in a capacity to state, and for that reason I am to request the earliest information, which the nature of things will permit, of the moneys, supplies, transportation, &c. which have been paid, advanced, or furnished, by your State, in order that I may know what remains due. The sooner full information can be obtained, the sooner shall we know what to rely on, and how to do equal justice to those who have contributed, and those who have not, to those who have contributed at one period, and those who have contributed at another.
I enclose an account of the specific supplies demanded of your State, as extracted from the journals of Congress, but without any mention of what has been done in consequence of those resolutions. Because as I have already observed, your Excellency will be able to discover the balance much better than I can.
I am further to entreat, Sir, that I may be favored with copies of the several acts passed in your State since the 18th of March, 1780, for the collection of taxes and the furnishing supplies, or other aids to the United States; the manner in which such acts have been executed, the times which may have been necessary for them to operate, and the consequences of their operation. I must also pray to be informed of so much of the internal police of your State as relates to the laying, assessing, levying, and collecting taxes. I beg leave to assure your Excellency, that I am not prompted either by an idle curiosity, or by any wish to discover what prudence would dictate to conceal. It is necessary that I should be informed of these things, and I take the plain, open, candid method of acquiring information. To palliate or conceal any evils or disorders in our situation, can answer no good purpose; they must be known before they can be cured. We must also know what resources can be brought forth, that we may proportion our efforts to our means, and our demands to both. It is necessary, that we should be in condition to prosecute the war with ease, before we can expect to lay down our arms with security, before we can treat of peace honorably, and before we can conclude it with advantage. I feel myself fettered at every movement, and embarrassed in every operation from my ignorance of our actual state, and of what is reasonably to be asked or expected. Yet when I consider our real wealth and numbers, and when I compare them with those of other countries, I feel a thorough conviction, that we may do much more than we have yet done, and with more ease to ourselves than we have yet felt, provided we adopt the proper modes of revenue and expenditure.