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SOUTH CAROLINA.

By Sir Henry Clinton, Knight of the Bath, general of His Majesty's forces, and Mariot Arbuthnot, Esquire, vice admiral of the blue, His Majesty's commissioners to restore peace and good government in the several colonies in rebellion in North America.

PROCLAMATION.

HIS Majesty having been pleased by his letters patent, under the great seal of Great Britain, to appoint us to be his commissioners, to restore the blessings of peace and liberty to the several colonies in rebellions in America, we do hereby make public his most gracious intentions, and in obedience to his commands, do declare to such of his deluded subjects as have been perverted from their duty by the factious arts of self-interested and ambitious men, that they will be received with mercy and forgiveness, if they immediately return to their allegiance, and a due obedience to those laws and that government which they formerly boasted was their best birthright and noblest inheritance; and upon a due experience of the sincerity of their possessions, a full and free pardon will be granted for the treasonable offences which they have heretofore committed, in such manner and form as His Majesty's commission doth direct.

Nevertheless it is only to those, who, convinced of their errors, are firmly resolved to return to and support that government under which they were formerly so happy and free, that these gracious offers are once more renewed; and therefore those persons are expected, who, notwithstanding their present hopeless situation, and regardless of the accumulating pressure of the miseries of the people, which their infatuated conduct must contribute to increase, are nevertheless still so hardened in their guilt, as to endeavour to keep alive the flame of rebellion in this province, which will otherwise soon be reinstate in its former prosperity, security, and peace.

Nor can we at present resolve to extend the royal clemency to those who are polluted with the blood of their fellow citizens, most wantonly and inhumanly shed under the mock forms of justice, because they refused submission to an usurpation which they abhorred, and would not oppose that government with which they deemed themselves inseparably connected: And in order to give quiet and content to the minds of His Majesty's faithful and well-affected subjects, we do again assure them, that they shall have effectual countenance, protection, and support, and, as soon as the situation of the province will admit, the inhabitants will be re-instated which they heretofore enjoyed under a free British government, exempt from taxation, except by their own legislature: And we do hereby call upon His Majesty's faithful subjects, to be aiding with their endeavours, in order that a measure so conducive to their own happiness, and the welfare and prosperity of the province, may be the more speedily and easily attained.

Given under our hands and seals, at Charles town, the 1st day of June, in the twentieth year of His Majesty's reign, and in they year of our Lord 1780.

H. CLINTON
M. ARBUTHNOT

By their excellencies command,
James Simpson, Sec.


(From A History of the Campaigns of 1780 and 1781 in the Southern Province of North America?, by Lieutenant-Colonel Tarleton, pp68-76.)

Tarleton, Ch 1., [I], p. 68a
6/1/1780

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