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The City of London and the Controversy over Immigration, 1660–1722*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
Extract
From the Restoration of Charles II in 1660 to the middle of the eighteenth century a protracted controversy took place over whether foreigners ought to be encouraged to come to settle in England. The debate was usually couched in terms of whether aliens should be offered naturalization in England. The word naturalize was sometimes used not in a technical legal sense, but in the first sense given in Johnson's Dictionary: ‘to adopt into a community’. In its stricter sense, the question was whether a cheap and convenient way should be offered to immigrants to acquire the rights of native-born English subjects. It was thought by both its advocates and its enemies that such an offer, by means of an act of general naturalization, would encourage a large influx of foreign protestants. The issue was debated repeatedly in parliament. Over a dozen attempts were made to pass an act for a general naturalization between the Restoration and the final passage of such an act in 1709. The act of 1709 was repealed only three years after its passage, but several more bills for a similar statute were introduced towards the middle of the century. The naturalization controversy is more easily followed, however, in the pages of the tracts, pamphlets, treatises, and broadsides, both in favour of and in opposition to a general naturalization, that tumbled from the presses throughout the period, and most profusely in the 1680s, 1690s, and 1700s. The debate aroused the interest especially of the growing ranks of those who, after the Restoration, interested themselves in trade matters.
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References
1 The journals of the two houses are strewn with references of the proposed bills: Journal of the House of Commons [C.J.] VIII, 555 (1664)Google Scholar; IX, 22 (1667); Journal of the House of Lords [L.J.] XII, 274 (1670)Google Scholar; C.J. IX, 175 (1670); L.J. XII, 521–2 (1673); C.J. IX, 250 (1673); L.J. XIII, 47 (1677); C.J. IX, 416–17 (1677); L.J. XIII, 258 (1678); XIII, 719 (1680); C.J. IX, 696 (1680); IX, 730 (1685); X, 86 (1689); X, 373 (1690); XI, 21 (1693); XI, 408 (1696); XI, 697 (1697); XII, 61 (1698); XVI, 93 (1709). See also Robbins, C., ‘A Note on general naturalization under the later Stuarts’, Journal of Modern History, XXIV (1962), 168–77CrossRefGoogle Scholar; 7 Anne c. 5. (1709 act).
2 Act of 1709 was repealed by 10 Anne c. 9; C.J. XXV, 195, 269–70, 319–20, 334, 449, 469; XXVI, 29, 53, 72, 80, 84, 123, 133, 137, 139–40, 170, 171.
3 Of such publications dating from the century after the Restoration over 500 are extant that treat either exclusively or in part the issue of naturalization.
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23 Great evil, p. 3.
24 Great evil, pp. 7–8.
25 12 Car. II, c. 4.
26 Great evil, pp. 5–6.
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28 The Wing Short-title catalogue dates the broadsides to the 1660s, as does the British Library General catalogue, but internal evidence places one in the year 1685 and another in 1690, and they are so nearly duplicates of one another that they must all date from the mid-1680s and later. The largest collection of them is held by the Corporation of London Record Office (C.L.R.O.), Alchin Box Q/XCVII, no. 5.
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32 Freedom by redemption meant becoming a citizen of London by payment of a fee; C.L.R.O., Rep. 94/60 (resolution regarding freedom by redemption, 4 Nov. 1688); C.L.R.O., Rep. 95/6–7 (Pierce petition to Aldermen, 16 Apr. 1689); C.L.R.O., Rep. 98/119–20 (petition regarding freedom by redemption, 1 February 1694); C.J. X, 373 (petition of Pierce against a private bill, 10 Apr. 1698); L.J. XV, 421 (petition of Pierce to Lords, 19 Apr. 1694).
33 The City Lands Committee administered the land owned by the Corporation, and since Pierce held his office by a lease from the City, the committee administered his lease of the farm of the alien duties as well.
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40 C.L.R.O., Misc. MSS 42.2: ‘An Account of Naturalization from Anno domini 1684’, (n.d.). This account was probably compiled by Pierce himself, and is therefore unlikely to underestimate the numbers of naturalizations.
41 C.L.R.O., Jor. 58/41/44, 56 (repeal of act of Court of October, 16th Eliz.); Jor. 59/349–50 (admission of Henry Fournier, 24 Sept. 1751).
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49 C.L.R.O., Misc. MSS 42.2.
50 C.L.R.O., Misc. MSS 42.2 (28 Nov. 1722); C.L.R.O., Alchin Box I/IV, fo. 5 (Report of Chamberlain to Lands Committee, 16 May 1723); C.L.R.O., Rep. 127/27–29, 37, (Report of 14 November 1722); C.L.R.O., Alchin Box G/81, fo. 53 (petition of sublessees of portage duty); C.L.R.O., Cases and Counsel Opinions Relating to the City, case 60, fo. 52 (opinion of Thomas Sutwyche, 2 July 1723); C.L.R.O., Misc. MSS 166.4 (account of duties received from 1 Oct. 1741 to 1 Jan. following); Glyn, mayor, at a court of aldermen (London, 1759), p. 63Google Scholar; C.L.R.O., ‘An Account of Scavage collected for the City of London from 1 June 1737 to the 7th May 1739’ Unfortunately, the rent paid for the subleases is given only for the portage duty: £60.
51 C.J. XXV, 195, 269–70, 319–20, 334, 469; XXVI, 29, 53, 72; C.L.R.O., Jor. 59/105–06 (19 Nov. 1747); Jor. 59/330–31 (19 Feb. 1751); Jor. 60/99–100 21 May 1753).
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