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tions, the House of Representatives, at its late session, passed a bill for that purpose; but it was not concurred in by the Senate. The insufficiency of the revenue, under the present low tariff, to meet the demands of the Treasury; the languishing condition of several of the more important branches of domestic industry, from the want of adequate encouragement; and the belief that the financial crisis of 1857, from the effects of which the country has not yet fully recovered, was the natural result of a departure from the protective policy; render it probable that a new attempt will soon be made for its restoration. It will hardly be alleged that the mass of the people are duly prepared to meet the question.

To assist in leading to correct conclusions any who may desire to investigate the subject, is the design of this volume. The object is not, however, to encourage the incorporation of the doctrine of protection into the platform of any political party. A correct decision, it is believed, is more likely to be attained when the public mind is uninfluenced by considerations of party advantage. If, in determining this or any other question, the people shall be guided by an enlightened and impartial judgment, no bad results need be apprehended. Should they chance to err in their decision, their intelligence would enable them at once to discover the error and to apply the true remedy.

This work prescribes no new course of legislation on this subject. It recommends no departure from the landmarks established by the founders of the government. It asserts no principle which has not received the sanction of Washington, Hamilton, Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, Adams, and Jackson, and their most distinguished cotemporaries. A laborious examination of this subject for many years, has the more fully confirmed the author's faith in the doctrines of the political fathers. A theory fundamentally correct, is unaffected by the lapse of time. A policy which has stood the test of successful experiment, it is unwise to abandon for an untried and a doubtful one-much more so, for one that has proved itself radically defective.

There has been no change in the condition or policy of other commercial nations which seems to justify the great changes which have been made in our own. Changes have been made in some of them; but they consist in the adoption of the industrial system recommended by our early statesmen, and furnish additional evidence of its utility..

This work is not an Essay, or a Treatise, consisting mainly of the author's individual opinions and reasonings. It is, as its title declares, a History. It begins with the colonial policy of Great Britain which led to the separation of the colonies .from the parent country, and ultimately to the establishing of a national government with power to protect the people against the restrictive measures which secured to that country a monopoly of trade. It gives a faithful record of the action of our Government on this subject, from time to time, since its organization. The views of our own statesmen, as expressed in executive messages, official reports, and legislative debates, will, it is believed, be more acceptable to the mass of readers, than a disquisition on the subject of protec tion by the ablest writer. The opinions of those men have been formed, not alone from what appeared theoretically correct, but also from the practical effects of the system. This entitles them to greater regard than is due to the speculations of any ordinary writer on this branch of political

economy.

To the conviction that a work of this kind is needed, this compilation owes its existence. If it shall serve to awaken any considerable portion of the American people to a deeper interest in matters of public concern, and to aid them in the discharge of their political duties, it will have accomplished its mission.

August, 1860.

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