Revolutionary War Documents | The Navigation Act
The Navigation Act of September 13, 1660
Excerpts from the Navigation Acts
British Parliament
Navigation Act of September 13, 1660
For the increase of shipping and encouragement
of the navigation of this nation wherein, under the good providence and
protection of God, the wealth, safety, and strength of this kingdom is
so much concerned; (2) be it enacted by the kings most excellent
Majesty, and by the Lords and Commons in this present Parliament
assembled, and by the authority thereof, that from and after the first
day of December, one thousand six hundred and sixty, and from thence
forward, no goods or commodities whatsoever shall be imported into or
exported out of any lands, islands, plantations, or territories to his
Majesty belonging or in his possession, or which may hereafter belong
unto or be in the possession of his Majesty, his heirs, and successors,
in Asia, Africa, or America, in any other ship or ships, vessel or
vessels whatsoever, but in such ships or vessels as do truly and without
fraud belong only to the people of England or Ireland, dominion of Wales
or town of Berwick upon Tweed, or are of the built of and belonging to
any the said lands, islands, plantations, or territories, as the
proprietors and right owners thereof, and whereof the master and three
fourths of the mariners at least are English; (3) under the penalty of
the forfeiture and loss of all the goods and commodities which shall be
imported into or exported out of any the aforesaid places in any other
ship or vessel, as also of the ship or vessel, with all its guns,
furniture, tackle, ammunition, and apparel; one third part thereof to
his Majesty, his heirs and successors; one third part to the governor of
such land, plantation, island, or territory where such default shall be
committed, in case the said ship or goods be there seized, or otherwise
that third part also to his Majesty, his heirs and successors; and the
other third part to him or them who shall seize, inform, or sue for the
same in any court of record, by bill, information, plaint, or other
action, wherein no essoin, protection, or wager of law shall be allowed;
(4) and all admirals and other commanders at sea of any the ships of war
or other ship having commission from his Majesty or from his heirs or
successors, are hereby authorized and strictly required to seize and
bring in as prize all such ships or vessels as shall have offended
contrary hereunto, and deliver them to the court of admiralty, there to
be proceeded against; and in case of condemnation, one moiety of such
forfeitures shall be to the use of such admirals or commanders and their
companies, to be divided and proportioned amongst them according to the
rules and orders of the sea in case of ships taken prize; and the other
moiety to the use of his Majesty, his heirs and successors.
II. And be it enacted, that no alien or person
not born within the allegiance of our sovereign lord the king, his heirs
and successors, or naturalized, or made a free denizen, shall from and
after the first day of February, which will be in the year of our Lord
one thousand six hundred sixty-one, exercise the trade or occupation of
a merchant or factor in any the said places; (2) upon pain of the
forfeiture and loss of all his goods and chattels, or which are in his
possession; one third to his Majesty, his heirs and successors; one
third to the governor of the plantation where such person shall so
offend; and the other third to him or them that shall inform or sue for
the same in any of his Majestys courts in the plantation where such
offence shall be committed; (3) and all governors of the said lands,
islands, plantations, or territories, and every of them, are hereby
strictly required and commanded, and all who hereafter shall be made
governors of any such islands, plantations, or territories, by his
Majesty, his heirs or successors, shall before their entrance into their
government take a solemn oath to do their utmost, that every the
afore-mentioned clauses, and all the matters and things therein
contained, shall be punctually and bona fide observed according
to the true intent and meaning thereof; (4) and upon complaint and proof
made before his Majesty, his heirs or successors, or such as shall be by
him or them thereunto authorized and appointed, that any the said
governors have been willingly and wittingly negligent in doing their
duty accordingly, that the said governor so offending shall be removed
from his government.
III. And it is further enacted by the authority
aforesaid, that no goods or commodities whatsoever, of the growth,
production or manufacture of Africa, Asia, or America, or of any part
thereof, or which are described or laid down in the usual maps or cards
of those places, be imported into England, Ireland, or Wales, islands of
Guernsey and Jersey, or town of Berwick upon Tweed, in any other ship or
ships, vessel or vessels whatsoever, but in such as do truly and without
fraud belong only to the people of England or Ireland, dominion of
Wales, or town of Berwick upon Tweed, or of the lands, islands,
plantations or territories in Asia, Africa, or America, to his Majesty
belonging, as the proprietors and right owners thereof, and whereof the
master, and three fourths at least of the mariners are English; (2)
under the penalty of the forfeiture of all such goods and commodities,
and of the ship or vessel in which they were imported, with all her
guns, tackle, furniture, ammunition, and apparel; one moiety to his
Majesty, his heirs and successors; and the other moiety to him or them
who shall seize, inform or sue for the same in any court of record, by
bill, information, plaint or other action wherein no essoin, protection
or wager of law shall be allowed.
XVIII. And it is further enacted by the
authority aforesaid, that from and after the first day of April, which
shall be in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred sixty-one, no
sugars, tobacco, cotton-wool, indigoes, ginger, fustic, or other dyeing
wood, of the growth, production, or manufacture of any English
plantations in America, Asia, or Africa, shall be shipped, carried,
conveyed, or transported from any of the said English plantations to any
land, island, territory, dominion, port, or place whatsoever, other than
to such other English plantations as do belong to his Majesty, his heirs
and successors, or to the kingdom of England or Ireland, or principality
of Wales, or town of Berwick upon Tweed, there to be laid on shore; (2)
under the penalty of the forfeiture of the said goods, or the full value
thereof, as also of the ship, with all her guns, tackle, apparel,
ammunition, and furniture; the one moiety to the kings Majesty, his
heirs and successors, and the other to moiety to him or them that shall
seize, inform, or sue for the same in any court of record, by bill,
plaint, or information, wherein no ession, protection, or wager of law
shall be allowed.
XIX. And be it further enacted by the authority
aforesaid, that for every ship or vessel, which from and after the five
and twentieth day of December in the year of our Lord one thousand six
hundred and sixty shall set sail out of or from England, Ireland, Wales,
or town of Berwick upon Tweed, for any English plantation in America,
Asia, or Africa, sufficient bond shall be given with one surety to the
chief officers of the custom-house and such port of place from whence
the said ship shall set sail, to the value of one thousand pounds, if
the ship be of less burden that one hundred tons; and of the sum of two
thousand pounds, if the ship shall be of greater burden; that in case
the said ship or vessel shall load any of the said commodities at any of
the said English plantations, that the same commodities shall be by the
said ship brought to some port of England, Ireland, Wales, or to the
port or town of Berwick upon Tweed, and shall there unload and put on
shore the same, the danger of the seas only expected; (2) and for all
ships coming from any other port or place to any of the aforesaid
plantations, who by this act are permitted to trade there, that the
governor of such English plantations shall before the said ship or
vessel be permitted to load on board any of the said commodities, take
bond in manner and to the value aforesaid, for each respective ship or
vessel, that such ship or vessel shall carry all the aforesaid goods
that shall be laden on board in the said ship to some other of his
Majestys English plantations, or to England, Ireland, Wales, or town
of Berwick upon Tweed; (3) and that every ship or vessel which shall
load or take on board any of the aforesaid goods, until such bond given
to the said governor, or certificate produced from the officers of any
custom-house of England, Ireland, Wales, or of the town of Berwick, that
such bonds have been there duly given, shall be forfeited with all her
guns, tackle, apparel, and furniture, to be employed and recovered in
manner as aforesaid; and the said governors and every of them shall
twice in every year after the first day of January one thousand six
hundred and sixty, return true copies of all such bonds by him so taken,
to the chief officers of the custom in London.
Qualification of the Navigation Act of 1660
At Whitehall the 13th of February 1660. Present
the Kings most excellent Majesty. Upon reading a narrative from the
officers and commissioners of his Majestys customs setting forth that
some merchants trading for New England find themselves much grieved in
respect of the strictness of the Act for Navigation, lately passed in
Parliament, requiring bond to be given here for such commodities as
shall be there laden, that the same shall be brought to some part of
England, Ireland, or Wales, etc. And the commodities of that country
being generally clove-boards, pipe-staves, and other timber, fish, and
such other rough commodities do better vend in other parts than here in
England, and by proceed thereof commodities of greater value from Spain
and other parts have been usually imported into England, and his Majesty
thereby much advantaged in his revenue. Upon due consideration whereof,
and at the humble suit of some merchants now outward bound upon that
trade, it is thought fit, and accordingly this day ordered by this
board, his Majesty present in council, that the right honorable lord
high treasurer of England do give power and authority to the officers
and commissioners of his Majestys customs in this port of London that
they take bond of the merchants trading to those ports only to return
the proceeds of those commodities that they shall there lade and not
bind them up to return the commodities in specie, the said clause in the
said Act of Navigation notwithstanding. And further, that the lord high
treasurer be, and accordingly he is, hereby desired to write his
effectual letters to the governor of that plantation giving him the same
liberty to take the like bond there, as being most conducible to the
benefit and advantage of trade and improvement of his Majestys
revenue.
Navigation Act of July 27, 1663
V. And in regard his Majestys plantations
beyond the seas are inhabited and peopled by his subjects of this his
kingdom of England; for the maintaining a greater correspondence and
kindness between them, and keeping them in a firmer dependence upon it,
and rendering them yet more beneficial and advantageous unto it in the
further employment and increase of English shipping and seamen, vent of
English woollen and other manufactures and commodities, rendering the
navigation to and from the same more safe and cheap, and making this
kingdom a staple, not only of the commodities of those plantations, but
also of the commodities of other countries and places, for the supplying
of them; and it being the usage of other nations to keep their
plantations trade to themselves.
VI. Be it enacted, and it is hereby enacted,
that from and after the five and twentieth day of March one thousand six
hundred sixty-four, no commodity of the growth, production, or
manufacture of Europe shall be imported into any land, island,
plantation, colony, territory, or place to his Majesty belonging, or
which shall hereafter belong unto or be in the possession of his
Majesty, his heirs and successors, in Asia, Africa, or America (Tangier
only expected) but what shall be bona fide, and without fraud,
laden and shipped in England, Wales, or the town of Berwick upon Tweed,
and in English built shipping . . .; and whereof the master and three
fourths of the mariners at least are English, and which shall be carried
directly thence to the said lands, islands, plantations, colonies,
territories, or places, and from no other place or places whatsoever;
any law, statute, or usage to the contrary notwithstanding; (2) under
the penalty of the loss of all such commodities of the growth,
production, or manufacture of Europe, as shall be imported into any of
them from any other place whatsoever, by land or water; and if by water,
of the ship or vessel also in which they were imported, with all her
guns, tackle, furniture, ammunition, and apparel; one third part to his
Majesty, his heirs and successors; one third part to the governor of
such land, island, plantation, colony, territory, or place, into which
such goods were imported, if the said ship, vessel, or goods be there
seized or informed against and sued for; or otherwise that third part
also to his Majesty, his heirs and successors; and the other third part
to him or them who shall seize, inform, or sue for the same in any of
his Majestys courts in such of the said lands, islands, colonies,
plantations, territories, or places where the offence was committed, or
in any court of record in England, by bill, information, plaint, or
other action, wherein no essoin, protection, or wager of law shall be
allowed.
VII. Provided always, and be it hereby enacted
by the authority aforesaid, that it shall and may be lawful to ship and
lade in such ships, and so navigated, as in the foregoing clause is set
down and expressed, in any part of Europe, salt for the fisheries of New
England and Newfoundland, and to ship and lade in the Madeiras wines
of the growth thereof, and to ship and lade in the Western islands of
Azores wines of the growth of the said islands, and to ship and take in
servants or horses in Scotland or Ireland, and to ship or lade in
Scotland all sorts of victual of the growth or production of Scotland,
and to ship or lade in Ireland all sorts of victual of the growth or
production of Ireland, and the same to transport into any of the said
lands, islands, plantations, colonies, territories, or places; anything
in the foregoing clause to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding.
VIII. And for the better prevention of frauds,
be it enacted and it is hereby enacted, that from and after the five and
twentieth day of March one thousand six hundred sixty and four, every
person or persons importing by land any goods or commodities whatsoever
into any the said lands, islands, plantations, colonies, territories, or
places, shall deliver to the governor of such land, island, plantation,
colony, territory, or place, or to such person or officer as shall be by
him thereunto authorized and appointed, within four and twenty hours
after such importation, his and their names and surnames, and a true
inventory and particular of all such goods or commodities, (2) and no
ship or vessel coming to any such land, island, plantation, colony,
territory, or place, shall lade or unlade any goods or commodities
whatsoever, until the master or commander of such ship or vessel shall
first have made known to the governor of such land, island, plantation,
colony, territory, or place, or such other person or officer as shall be
by him thereunto authorized and appointed, the arrival of the said ship
or vessel, with her name, and the name and surname of her master or
commander, and have shown to him that she is an English built ship, or
made good by producing such certificate, as abovesaid, that she is a
ship or vessel bona fide belonging to England, Wales, or the town
of Berwick, and navigated with an English master, and three fourth parts
of the mariners at least Englishmen, and have delivered to such governor
or other person or officer a true and perfect inventory or invoice of
her lading, together with the place or places in which the said goods
were laden or taken into the said ship or vessel. . .
Navigation Act of April 10, 1696
Whereas notwithstanding divers acts made for
the encouragement of the navigation of this kingdom, . . . great abuses
are daily committed to the prejudice of the English navigation, and the
loss of a great part of the plantation trade to this kingdom, by the
artifice and cunning of ill-disposed persons; for remedy whereof for the
future. . . .
II. Be it enacted, . . . that after the five
and twentieth day of March, one thousand six hundred and ninety-eight,
no goods or merchandises whatsoever shall be imported into, or exported
out of, any colony or plantation . . . or shall be laden in, or carried
from any one port or place in the said colonies or plantations to any
other port or place in the same, the kingdom of England, dominion of
Wales, or towns of Berwick upon Tweed, in any ship or bottom but what is
or shall be of the built of England, or of the built of Ireland, or the
said colonies or plantations, and wholly owned by the people thereof, or
any of them, and navigated with the masters and three fourths of the
mariners of the said places only (except such ships only as are or shall
be taken as prize, and condemnation thereof made in one of the courts of
admiralty in England, Ireland, or the said colonies or plantations, to
be navigated by the master and three-fourths of the mariners English, or
of the said plantations as aforesaid, and whereof the property doth
belong to Englishmen; and also except for the space of three years, such
foreign built ships as shall be employed by the commissioners of his
Majestys navy for the time being, or upon contract with them, in
bringing only masts, timber, and other naval stores for the kings
service from his Majestys colonies or plantations to this kingdom, to
be navigated as aforesaid, and whereof the property doth belong to
Englishmen), under pain of forfeiture of ship and goods; one third part
whereof to be to the use of his Majesty, his heirs and successors, one
third part to the governor of the said colonies or plantations, and the
other third part to the person who shall inform and sue for the same, by
bill, plaint or information, in any of his Majestys courts of record
at Westminster, or in any court in his Majestys plantations, where
such offence shall be committed.
IV. Colonial governors were required to take an
oath by the Navigation Act of 1660 to enforce the clauses of the Act
preceding the oath, but were not "strictly obliged by that oath to
put in execution the subsequent clauses of the said act, although some
of the clauses following are of great importance, and tend greatly to
the security of the plantation trade" and since other laws have
been passed since then for regulating and securing the plantation trade,
all present and future governors and commanders-in-chief in the colonies
must take an oath to do their utmost to enforce all the acts of
Parliament relating to the colonies and plantations. If any governor or
commander-in-chief neglects to take the oath or is "wittingly or
willingly negligent" he shall be removed from office and forfeit
one thousand pounds sterling.
V. Whereas by the Navigation Act of 1663
colonial governors were empowered to appoint an officer to carry out
provisions of the Act, which officer "is there commonly known by
the name of the naval officer" and whereas through connivance or
negligence, frauds and abuses have been committed, all such officers
must give security to the Commissioner of Customs in England for the
faithful performance of their duty. Colonial governors are to be
answerable for "offenses, neglects or misdemeanours" of
persons appointed by them.
VI. And for the more effectual preventing of
frauds, and regulating abuses in the plantation trade in America, be it
further enacted by the authority aforesaid, that all ships coming into,
or going out of, any of the said plantations, and lading or unlading any
goods or commodities, whether the same be his Majestys ships of war,
or merchant ships, and the masters and commanders thereof, and their
ladings, shall be subject and liable to the same rules, visitations,
searches, penalties, and forfeitures, as to the entering, lading or
discharging their respective ships and ladings, as ships and their
ladings, and the commanders and masters of ships, are subject and liable
unto in this kingdom, by virtue of an act of Parliament made in the
fourteenth year of the reign of King Charles the second, entitled, An
Act for preventing frauds, and regulating abuses in his Majestys
customs; and that the officers for collecting and managing his
Majestys revenue, and inspecting the plantation trade, in any of the
said plantations, shall have the same powers and authorities, for
visiting and searching of ships, and taking their entries, and for
seizing and securing or bringing on shore any of the goods prohibited to
be imported or exported into or out of any the said plantations, or for
which any duties are payable, or ought to have been paid, by any of the
before mentioned acts, as are provided for the officers of the customs
in England by the said last mentioned act made in the fourteenth year of
the reign of King Charles the second, and also to enter houses or
warehouses, to search for and seize any such goods; and that all the
wharfingers, and owners of quays and wharfs, or any lightermen,
bargemen, watermen, porters, or other persons assisting in the
conveyance, concealment or rescue of any of the said goods, or in the
hindering or resistance of any of the said officers in the performance
of their duty, and the boats, barges, lighters, or other vessels,
employed in the conveyance of such goods, shall be subject to the like
pains and penalties as are provided by the same act made in the
fourteenth year of the reign of King Charles the second, in relation to
prohibited or uncustomed goods in this kingdom; and that the like
assistance shall be given to the said officers in the execution of their
office, as by the said last mentioned act is provided for the officers
in England; and also that the said officers shall be subject to the same
penalties and forfeitures, for any corruptions, frauds, connivances, or
concealments, in violation of any the before mentioned laws, as any
officers of the customs in England are liable to, by virtue of the said
last mentioned act; and also that in case any officer or officers in the
plantations shall be sued or molested for any thing done in the
execution of their office, the said officer shall and may plead the
general issue, and shall give this or other custom acts in evidence, and
the judge to allow thereof, have and enjoy the like privileges and
advantages, as are allowed by law to the officers of his Majestys
customs in England.
VII. And it is hereby further enacted, that all
the penalties and forfeitures before mentioned, not in this act
particularly disposed of, shall be one third part to the use of his
Majesty, his heirs and successors, and one third part to the governor of
the colony or plantation where the offence shall be committed, and the
other third part to such person or persons as shall sue for the same, to
be recovered in any of his Majestys courts at Westminster, or in the
kingdom of Ireland, or in the court of admiralty held in his Majestys
plantations respectively, where such offence shall be committed, at the
pleasure of the officer of informer, or in any other plantation
belonging to any subject of England, wherein no essoin, protection, or
wager of law, shall be allowed; and that where any question shall arise
concerning the importation or exportation of any goods into or out of
the said plantations, in such case the proof shall lie upon the owner or
claimer, and the claimer shall be reputed the importer or owner thereof.
VIII. And whereas in some of his Majestys
American plantations, a doubt or misconstruction has arisen upon the
before mentioned act, made in the five and twentieth year of the reign
of King Charles the second, whereby certain duties are laid upon the
commodities therein enumerated (which by law may be transported from one
plantation to another for the supply of each others wants), as if the
same were by the payment of those duties in one plantation, discharged
from giving the securities intended by the aforesaid acts, made in the
twelfth, two and twentieth, and three and twentieth years of the reign
of King Charles the second, and consequently be at liberty to go to any
foreign market in Europe, without coming to England, Wales, or Berwick;
it is hereby further enacted and declared, that notwithstanding the
payment of the aforesaid duties in any of the said plantations, none of
the said goods shall be shipped or laden on board, until such security
shall be given as is required by the said acts, made in the twelfth, two
and twentieth and three and twentieth years of the reign of King Charles
the second, to carry the same to England, Wales or Berwick, or to some
other of his Majestys plantations, and so toties quoties, as
any of the said goods shall be brought to be reshipped or laden in any
of the said plantations, under the penalty and forfeiture of ship and
goods, to be divided and disposed of as aforesaid.
IX. And it is further enacted and declared by
the authority aforesaid, that all laws, by-laws, usages or customs, at
this time, or which hereafter shall be in practice, or endeavoured or
pretended to be in force or practice, in any of the said plantations,
which are in any wise repugnant to the before mentioned laws, or any of
them, so far as they do relate to the said plantations, or any of them,
or which are any ways repugnant to this present act, or to any other law
hereafter to be made in this kingdom, so far as such law shall relate to
and mention the said plantations, are illegal, null and void, to all
intents and purposes whatsoever.
X. Great frauds have been committed by
Scotchmen and others by counterfeiting certificates of security to bring
plantation goods to England or Wales; and certificates of having
discharged plantation goods in England or Wales or of having loaded
European goods in England or Wales, thereby evading transshipment
through England. Therefore it is further enacted that when governors or
customs officers in the colonies have reasonable suspicion that
certificates of having given security in England are false, they shall
require sufficient security for discharge in England or Wales. Where
there is cause to suspect that the certificate of having loaded
plantation goods in Britain is false, such officers shall not vacate the
security given in the plantation until they are informed by the customs
commissioners in England that the certificate is true. Persons
counterfeiting or altering any such certificate or permit or knowingly
use such shall forfeit five hundred pounds and the certificate or permit
shall be invalid.
XI. And for the better executing the several
acts of Parliament relating to the plantation trade, be it enacted by
the authority aforesaid, that the Lord Treasurer, Commissioners of the
Treasury, and the Commissioners of the Customs in England for the time
being, shall and may constitute and appoint such and so many officers of
the customs in any city, town, river, port, harbour or creek, of or
belonging to any of the islands, tracts of land and proprieties, when
and as often as to them shall seem needful; be it further also enacted,
that upon any actions, suits, and informations that shall be brought,
commenced, or entered in the said plantations, upon any law or statute
concerning his Majestys duties, or ships or goods to be forfeited by
reason of any unlawful importations or exportations, there shall not be
any jury, but of such only as are natives of England or Ireland, or are
born in his Majestys said plantations; and also that upon all such
actions, suits, and informations, the offences may be laid or alleged in
any colony, province, county, precinct, or division of any of the said
plantations where such offences are alleged to be committed, at the
pleasure of the officer or informer.
XII. Provided always, that all places of trust
in the courts of law, or what relates to the treasury of the said
islands, shall, from the making of this act, be in the hands of the
native-born subjects of England or Ireland, or of the said islands.
XIII. By the act of 1670-71, Ireland is left
out of the condition of the bonds therein required; that same Act
required that prior to loading enumerated goods in the plantation, ships
should give bond that all such goods would be carried to another English
plantation or to Great Britain. No time limit had been set for returning
certificates of proof that goods were discharged as required by the
bond, and the sureties for said bonds had often been persons of
uncertain and unknown residence, rendering the bonds ineffectual to the
intended purposes: it is therefore enacted that in all such bonds
hereafter given in the plantations, the sureties are to be persons of
known residence and of known ability for the value of the bond. And the
condition of the bonds shall be that within 18 months of their date (the
danger of the seas expected) certificate be procured that the goods
mentioned have been discharged in a proper port.
XIV. Ships carrying American produce have been
unloaded in Scotland and Ireland, contrary to existing law, under the
pretence they were driven there by weather, lack of provisions, or other
cause. After December 1, 1696, it shall be unlawful under any pretext to
unload in Scotland or Ireland any goods or merchandise the growth or
product of the American plantations unless they have first been landed
in England or Wales and the proper duties paid. Penalty to be forfeiture
of the ship and goods, with three-fourths to the crown and the other
fourth to him or them bringing the action.
XVI. Persons claiming any right or propriety in
any islands or tracts of land upon the continent of America, by charter
or letters patent, shall not sell them to any other than natural-born
subjects of England, Ireland, Wales, or Berwick without prior consent of
the Crown by order in council. Governors nominated or appointed by such
proprietors to be approved of by the king and take the oaths required of
governors in the kings other colonies, before entering upon the
government.
XVII. And for a more effectual prevention of
frauds which may be used to elude the intention of this act, by
colouring foreign ships under English names; be it further enacted by
the authority aforesaid, that from and after the five and twentieth day
of March, which shall be in the year of our Lord one thousand six
hundred ninety-eight, no ship or vessel whatsoever shall be deemed or
pass as a ship of the built of England, Ireland, Wales, Berwick,
Guernsey, Jersey, or any of his Majestys plantations in America, so
as to be qualified to trade to, from, or in any of the plantations,
until the person or persons claiming property in such ship or vessel
shall register the same . . . with proper proof and oath of ownership as
herein prescribed.
XVIII. This oath, attested by the governor or
custom officer administering it, shall be registered and delivered to
the master of the ship, with a duplicate of the register transmitted for
entry in the general register of the customs commissioners in London.
After March 25, 1698, any ship engaging in trade with the American
colonies without such proof shall be liable to such prosecution and
forfeiture as any foreign ship (except prizes condemned in the High
Court of Admiralty) would be liable to for trading to these plantations.
XIX. Ships taken at sea and condemned as prizes
in the High Court of Admiralty to be specially registered, with proper
oaths and proof of entire English ownership, before being allowed the
privileges of an English built ship.
XX. Provided also, that nothing in this act
shall be construed to require the registering any fisher-boats, hoys
[coasting vessels], lighters, barges, or any open boats or other vessels
(though of English or plantation built) whose navigation is confined to
the rivers or coasts of the same plantation or place where they trade
respectively, but only of such of them as cross the seas to or from any
of the lands, islands, places, or territories, in this act before
recited, or from one plantation to another.
XXI. No ships name registered shall be
changed without new registration. Such new registration also is required
if ownership is transferred to another port. If there is any change of
ownership in the same port, by the sale of one or more shares in any
registered ship, this is to be acknowledged by endorsement on the
registration certificate before two witnesses, to prove that the entire
ownership remains English.
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