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[[Image:Map of territorial growth 1775.svg|thumb|A portion of eastern North America; the 1763 "proclamation line" is the border between the red and the pink areas.]]
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The '''Royal Proclamation of 1763''' was issued October 7, 1763, by [[George III of the United Kingdom|King George III]] following [[Kingdom of Great Britain|Great Britain]]'s acquisition of [[New France|French territory]] in [[North America]] after the end of the [[French and Indian War]]/[[Seven Years' War]]. The purpose of the proclamation was to organize Great Britain's new North American empire and to stabilize relations with [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native North Americans]] through regulation of [[fur trade|trade]], settlement, and land purchases on the western frontier. The Royal Proclamation continues to be of legal importance to [[First Nations]] in Canada and is significant for the variation of indigenous status in the United States.<ref name=Arnold>{{cite book|last=Arnold|first=Richard|title=Americana Redux|year=2011|publisher=Talkingpipe|location=Kansas|isbn=978-0-615-28722-5|pages=186}}</ref>

==Background==
{{Main|Great Britain in the Seven Years War}}
The [[Treaty of Paris (1763)|Treaty of Paris]], ending Britain's participation in the [[Seven Years War]], had seen large swaths of new land brought under British [[Crown land|Crown control]], as Britain was ceded all North America east of the [[Mississippi River]], including the former French province of Quebec.

==Provisions==
===New colonies===
Besides regulating colonial expansion, the proclamation dealt with the management of newly ceded French colonies. It established government for four areas: [[Province of Quebec (1763–1791)|Quebec]], [[West Florida]], [[East Florida]], and [[Grenada]].

===Native lands===
One of the biggest problems confronting the British Empire in 1763 was controlling land speculators in both Europe and the British colonies whose activities often led to frontier conflicts.<ref name=Arnold>{{cite book|last=Arnold|first=Richard|title=Americana Redux|year=2011|publisher=Talkingpipe|location=Kansas|isbn=978-0-615-28722-5}}</ref> Many Native American peoples—primarily in the [[Great Lakes region (North America)|Great Lakes region]]—had a long and close relationship with France, and were dismayed to find that they were now under British sovereignty. [[Pontiac's Rebellion]] (1763–66) was an unsuccessful effort by Native Americans to prevent Great Britain from occupying the land previously claimed by France. The Proclamation of 1763 had been in the works before Pontiac's Rebellion, but the outbreak of the conflict hastened the process. British officials hoped the proclamation would reconcile Aboriginals to British rule and thus help to prevent future hostilities.

The proclamation created a boundary line (often called the ''proclamation line'') between the British colonies on the Atlantic coast and American Indian lands (called the [[Indian Reserve (1763)|Indian Reserve]]) west of the [[Appalachian Mountains]]. The proclamation line was not intended to be a permanent boundary between white and Aboriginal lands, but rather a temporary boundary which could be extended further west in an orderly, lawful manner.<ref>Harvey Markowitz, ''American Indians'' (1995) p. 633</ref><ref>Louis De Vorsey, ''The Indian boundary in the southern colonies, 1763–1775'' (1966) p. 39.</ref> Its contour was defined by the headwaters that formed the watershed along the Appalachia&mdash;all land with rivers that flowed into the Atlantic was designated for the colonial entities while all the land with rivers that flowed into the Mississippi was reserved for the native Indian population. The proclamation outlawed private purchase of Native American land, which had often created problems in the past; instead, all future land purchases were to be made by Crown officials "at some public Meeting or Assembly of the said Indians". Furthermore, British colonists were forbidden to move beyond the line and settle on native lands, and colonial officials were forbidden to grant grounds or lands without royal approval. The proclamation gave the Crown a monopoly on all future land purchases from American Indians.

Almost immediately, many British colonists and land speculators objected to the proclamation boundary, since there were already many settlements beyond the line (some of which had been temporarily evacuated during Pontiac's War), as well as many existing land claims yet to be settled. Indeed, the proclamation itself called for lands to be granted to British soldiers that had served in the Seven Years' War. Prominent American colonists joined with land speculators in Britain to lobby the government to move the line further west. As a result, the boundary line was adjusted in a series of treaties with Native Americans. The [[Treaty of Fort Stanwix]] and the [[Treaty of Hard Labor]] (both 1768) and the [[Treaty of Lochaber]] (1770) opened much of what is now [[West Virginia]] and [[Kentucky]] to British settlement.

==Legacy==
{{Indigenous Peoples of Canada}}

===Canadian Aboriginals===
{{details|The Canadian Crown and Aboriginal peoples|Canadian Aboriginal legacy}}
The Royal Proclamation continued to govern the cession of aboriginal land in [[British North America]], especially [[Upper Canada]] and [[Rupert's Land]]. The proclamation forms the basis of land claims of aboriginal peoples in Canada – [[First Nations]], [[Inuit]], and [[Metis (people)|Métis]]. The Royal Proclamation of 1763 is thus mentioned in [[Section Twenty-five of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms|section 25]] of the [[Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms]].

According to historian Colin Calloway, "scholars disagree on whether the proclamation recognized or undermined tribal sovereignty".<ref>Calloway, ''Scratch of a Pen'', 93.</ref> The language of the proclamation made it clear that the British still believed that all native lands ultimately belonged to the Crown. However, the proclamation established the important precedent that the indigenous population had certain rights to the lands they occupied—in the past, by contrast, the Crown had granted lands without regard to native claims.

Some see the Royal Proclamation of 1763 as a “fundamental document” for [[First Nations]] land claims and [[self-government]].<ref>John Borrows, “Wampum at Niagara: The Royal Proclamation, Canadian Legal History, and Self-Government,” in ''Aboriginal and Treaty Rights in Canada'', ed. Michael Asch. (Vancouver: UBC Press, 1997), 155.</ref> It is “the first legal recognition by the [[British Crown]] of [[Aboriginal rights]].”<ref>Douglas R. Francis, Richard Jones and Donald B. Smith, ''Origins: Canadian History to Confederation'' 6th ed. (Toronto: Nelson Education Ltd., 2009), 157.</ref> The intent and promises made to the native in the Proclamation have been argued to be of a temporary nature, only meant to appease the Native peoples who were becoming increasingly resentful of “settler encroachments on their lands”<ref>Francis et al., ''Origins,'' 156.</ref> and were capable of becoming a serious threat to British colonial settlement.<ref>Jack Stagg, ''Anglo-Indian Relations In North America to 1763 and An Analysis of the Royal Proclamation of 7 October 1763'', Indian and Northern Affairs Canada, Research Branch, 1981, 356.</ref><ref>Borrows, "''Wampum''," 158&ndash;159.</ref> While advising the Board of Trade on August 30, 1764, Sir William Johnson expressed that
<blockquote>
The Indians all know we cannot be a Match for them in the midst of an extensive woody Country…from whence I infer that if we are determined to possess Our Posts, Trade & ca securely, it cannot be done for a Century by any other means than that of purchasing the favour of the numerous Indian inhabitants.<ref>Quoted in ''Native Liberty, Crown Sovereignty: The Existing Aboriginal Right of Self-Government in Canada'', Bruce Clark. (Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1990), 81.</ref></blockquote>With the proclamation, “the British were trying to convince Native people that there was nothing to fear from the [[colonists]], while at the same time trying to increase political and economic power relative to First Nations and other European powers.”<ref>Borrows, "''Wampum''," 160.</ref> However, the Royal Proclamation along with the subsequent [[Treaty of Fort Niagara|Treaty of Niagara]], provide for an argument that “discredits the claims of the Crown to exercise [[sovereignty]] over First Nations”<ref>Borrows, "''Wampum''," 164.</ref> and affirms Aboriginal “powers of [[self-determination]] in, among other things, allocating lands.”<ref>Borrows, "''Wampum''," 165.</ref> Further so, the Royal Proclamation outlined a policy in which to protect and extinguish Aboriginal rights and in doing so, recognized these rights existed.

===For the United States===
{{Ref improve section|date=July 2010}}
The influence of the Royal Proclamation of 1763 on the coming of the [[American Revolution]] has been variously interpreted. Many historians argue that the proclamation ceased to be a major source of tension after 1768, since the aforementioned treaties opened up extensive lands for settlement. Others have argued that colonial resentment of the proclamation contributed to the growing divide between the colonies and the mother country.

Historian [[Woody Holton]], for example, argued that even though the boundary was pushed west in subsequent treaties, the British government refused to permit new colonial settlements for fear of instigating a war with Native Americans, which angered colonial land speculators.<ref>Woody Holton, "The Ohio Indians and the Coming of the American Revolution in Virginia", ''The Journal of Southern History', Vol. 60, No. 3, (August 1994), 453–78.</ref> [[George Washington]] was given {{convert|20000|acre|km2}} of wild land in the Ohio region for his services in the French and Indian War.

In 1770, Washington took the lead in securing the rights of him and his old soldiers in the French War, advancing money to pay expenses in behalf of the common cause and using his influence in the proper quarters. In August 1770, it was decided that Washington should personally make a trip to the western region, where he located tracts for himself and military comrades and eventually was granted letters patent for tracts of land there. The lands involved were open to Virginians under terms of the [[Treaty of Lochaber]] of 1770.

In the United States, the Royal Proclamation of 1763 ended with the American Revolutionary War because Great Britain ceded the land in question to the United States in the [[Treaty of Paris (1783)]]. Afterward, the US government also faced difficulties in preventing frontier violence and eventually adopted policies similar to those of the Royal Proclamation. The first in a series of [[Indian Intercourse Act]]s was passed in 1790, prohibiting unregulated trade and travel in Native American lands. Additionally, the U.S. Supreme Court case [[Johnson v. M'Intosh]] (1823) established that only the U.S. government, and not private individuals, could purchase land from Native Americans.

==References==
;Notes
{{Reflist}}

;Bibliography
{{refbegin}}
*Abernethy, Thomas Perkins. ''Western Lands and the American Revolution''. Originally published 1937. New York: Russell & Russell, 1959.
*Calloway, Colin. ''The Scratch of a Pen: 1763 and the Transformation of North America''. Oxford University Press, 2006. ISBN 0-19-530071-8.
{{refend}}

==Further reading==
{{refbegin}}
*Cashin, Edward J. "Governor Henry Ellis and the Transformation of British North America." Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1994.
*Lawson, Philip. ''The Imperial Challenge: Quebec and Britain in the Age of the American Revolution.'' Montreal/Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1989.
* Roth, Christopher F. (2002) "Without Treaty, without Conquest: Indigenous Sovereignty in Post-Delgamuukw British Columbia." ''Wicazo Sa Review,'' vol. 17, no. 2, pp.&nbsp;143–165.
*Stonechild, Blair A. "Indian-White Relations in Canada, 1763 to the Present." In ''Encyclopedia of North American Indians'', ed. Frederick E. Hoxie, 277&ndash;81. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1996.
* Tousignant, Pierre. "The Integration of the Province of Quebec into the British Empire, 1763&ndash;91. Part 1: From the Royal Proclamation to the Quebec Act." In ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography'', vol. 4. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1980.
{{refend}}

==External links==
{{Wikisource}}
* [http://www.specific-claims-law.com/specific-claims-background/12-royal-proclamation-1763 Complete text of the Royal Proclamation, 1763]
* [http://www.ushistory.org/declaration/related/proc63.htm UShistory.org: Article about the proclamation]
* [http://ia331330.us.archive.org/1/items/georgewashington11858gut/11858-h/11858-h.htm Complete text of the book George Washington: Farmer, by Paul Leland Haworth]

{{Constitution of Canada}}
{{American Revolution origins}}
{{British law and the American Revolution}}
{{Indigenous rights footer}}
{{Aboriginal title in the United States}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Royal Proclamation Of 1763}}
[[Category:Laws leading to the American Revolution]]
[[Category:Colonial United States (British)]]
[[Category:History of United States expansionism]]
[[Category:Canada–United States relations]]
[[Category:1763 in law]]
[[Category:1763 in the Thirteen Colonies]]
[[Category:Legal history of Canada]]
[[Category:Pontiac's War]]
[[Category:Monarchy in Canada]]
[[Category:Aboriginal title in Canada]]
[[Category:Aboriginal title in the United States]]
[[Category:George III of the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Proclamations]]

[[de:Königliche Proklamation von 1763]]
[[fr:Proclamation royale de 1763]]
[[id:Proklamasi Kerajaan 1763]]
[[he:ההכרזה המלכותית של 1763]]
[[hu:1763-as királyi proklamáció]]
[[ja:1763年宣言]]
[[nn:Den kongelege kunngjeringa i 1763]]
[[ru:Королевская декларация 1763 года]]
[[simple:Royal Proclamation of 1763]]
[[zh:1763年公告]]

Revision as of 16:25, 15 May 2012

A portion of eastern North America; the 1763 "proclamation line" is the border between the red and the pink areas.

The Royal Proclamation of 1763 was issued October 7, 1763, by King George III following Great Britain's acquisition of French territory in North America after the end of the French and Indian War/Seven Years' War. The purpose of the proclamation was to organize Great Britain's new North American empire and to stabilize relations with Native North Americans through regulation of trade, settlement, and land purchases on the western frontier. The Royal Proclamation continues to be of legal importance to First Nations in Canada and is significant for the variation of indigenous status in the United States.[1]

Background

The Treaty of Paris, ending Britain's participation in the Seven Years War, had seen large swaths of new land brought under British Crown control, as Britain was ceded all North America east of the Mississippi River, including the former French province of Quebec.

Provisions

New colonies

Besides regulating colonial expansion, the proclamation dealt with the management of newly ceded French colonies. It established government for four areas: Quebec, West Florida, East Florida, and Grenada.

Native lands

One of the biggest problems confronting the British Empire in 1763 was controlling land speculators in both Europe and the British colonies whose activities often led to frontier conflicts.[1] Many Native American peoples—primarily in the Great Lakes region—had a long and close relationship with France, and were dismayed to find that they were now under British sovereignty. Pontiac's Rebellion (1763–66) was an unsuccessful effort by Native Americans to prevent Great Britain from occupying the land previously claimed by France. The Proclamation of 1763 had been in the works before Pontiac's Rebellion, but the outbreak of the conflict hastened the process. British officials hoped the proclamation would reconcile Aboriginals to British rule and thus help to prevent future hostilities.

The proclamation created a boundary line (often called the proclamation line) between the British colonies on the Atlantic coast and American Indian lands (called the Indian Reserve) west of the Appalachian Mountains. The proclamation line was not intended to be a permanent boundary between white and Aboriginal lands, but rather a temporary boundary which could be extended further west in an orderly, lawful manner.[2][3] Its contour was defined by the headwaters that formed the watershed along the Appalachia—all land with rivers that flowed into the Atlantic was designated for the colonial entities while all the land with rivers that flowed into the Mississippi was reserved for the native Indian population. The proclamation outlawed private purchase of Native American land, which had often created problems in the past; instead, all future land purchases were to be made by Crown officials "at some public Meeting or Assembly of the said Indians". Furthermore, British colonists were forbidden to move beyond the line and settle on native lands, and colonial officials were forbidden to grant grounds or lands without royal approval. The proclamation gave the Crown a monopoly on all future land purchases from American Indians.

Almost immediately, many British colonists and land speculators objected to the proclamation boundary, since there were already many settlements beyond the line (some of which had been temporarily evacuated during Pontiac's War), as well as many existing land claims yet to be settled. Indeed, the proclamation itself called for lands to be granted to British soldiers that had served in the Seven Years' War. Prominent American colonists joined with land speculators in Britain to lobby the government to move the line further west. As a result, the boundary line was adjusted in a series of treaties with Native Americans. The Treaty of Fort Stanwix and the Treaty of Hard Labor (both 1768) and the Treaty of Lochaber (1770) opened much of what is now West Virginia and Kentucky to British settlement.

Legacy

Canadian Aboriginals

The Royal Proclamation continued to govern the cession of aboriginal land in British North America, especially Upper Canada and Rupert's Land. The proclamation forms the basis of land claims of aboriginal peoples in Canada – First Nations, Inuit, and Métis. The Royal Proclamation of 1763 is thus mentioned in section 25 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

According to historian Colin Calloway, "scholars disagree on whether the proclamation recognized or undermined tribal sovereignty".[4] The language of the proclamation made it clear that the British still believed that all native lands ultimately belonged to the Crown. However, the proclamation established the important precedent that the indigenous population had certain rights to the lands they occupied—in the past, by contrast, the Crown had granted lands without regard to native claims.

Some see the Royal Proclamation of 1763 as a “fundamental document” for First Nations land claims and self-government.[5] It is “the first legal recognition by the British Crown of Aboriginal rights.”[6] The intent and promises made to the native in the Proclamation have been argued to be of a temporary nature, only meant to appease the Native peoples who were becoming increasingly resentful of “settler encroachments on their lands”[7] and were capable of becoming a serious threat to British colonial settlement.[8][9] While advising the Board of Trade on August 30, 1764, Sir William Johnson expressed that

The Indians all know we cannot be a Match for them in the midst of an extensive woody Country…from whence I infer that if we are determined to possess Our Posts, Trade & ca securely, it cannot be done for a Century by any other means than that of purchasing the favour of the numerous Indian inhabitants.[10]

With the proclamation, “the British were trying to convince Native people that there was nothing to fear from the colonists, while at the same time trying to increase political and economic power relative to First Nations and other European powers.”[11] However, the Royal Proclamation along with the subsequent Treaty of Niagara, provide for an argument that “discredits the claims of the Crown to exercise sovereignty over First Nations”[12] and affirms Aboriginal “powers of self-determination in, among other things, allocating lands.”[13] Further so, the Royal Proclamation outlined a policy in which to protect and extinguish Aboriginal rights and in doing so, recognized these rights existed.

For the United States

The influence of the Royal Proclamation of 1763 on the coming of the American Revolution has been variously interpreted. Many historians argue that the proclamation ceased to be a major source of tension after 1768, since the aforementioned treaties opened up extensive lands for settlement. Others have argued that colonial resentment of the proclamation contributed to the growing divide between the colonies and the mother country.

Historian Woody Holton, for example, argued that even though the boundary was pushed west in subsequent treaties, the British government refused to permit new colonial settlements for fear of instigating a war with Native Americans, which angered colonial land speculators.[14] George Washington was given 20,000 acres (81 km2) of wild land in the Ohio region for his services in the French and Indian War.

In 1770, Washington took the lead in securing the rights of him and his old soldiers in the French War, advancing money to pay expenses in behalf of the common cause and using his influence in the proper quarters. In August 1770, it was decided that Washington should personally make a trip to the western region, where he located tracts for himself and military comrades and eventually was granted letters patent for tracts of land there. The lands involved were open to Virginians under terms of the Treaty of Lochaber of 1770.

In the United States, the Royal Proclamation of 1763 ended with the American Revolutionary War because Great Britain ceded the land in question to the United States in the Treaty of Paris (1783). Afterward, the US government also faced difficulties in preventing frontier violence and eventually adopted policies similar to those of the Royal Proclamation. The first in a series of Indian Intercourse Acts was passed in 1790, prohibiting unregulated trade and travel in Native American lands. Additionally, the U.S. Supreme Court case Johnson v. M'Intosh (1823) established that only the U.S. government, and not private individuals, could purchase land from Native Americans.

References

Notes
  1. ^ a b Arnold, Richard (2011). Americana Redux. Kansas: Talkingpipe. p. 186. ISBN 978-0-615-28722-5. Cite error: The named reference "Arnold" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ Harvey Markowitz, American Indians (1995) p. 633
  3. ^ Louis De Vorsey, The Indian boundary in the southern colonies, 1763–1775 (1966) p. 39.
  4. ^ Calloway, Scratch of a Pen, 93.
  5. ^ John Borrows, “Wampum at Niagara: The Royal Proclamation, Canadian Legal History, and Self-Government,” in Aboriginal and Treaty Rights in Canada, ed. Michael Asch. (Vancouver: UBC Press, 1997), 155.
  6. ^ Douglas R. Francis, Richard Jones and Donald B. Smith, Origins: Canadian History to Confederation 6th ed. (Toronto: Nelson Education Ltd., 2009), 157.
  7. ^ Francis et al., Origins, 156.
  8. ^ Jack Stagg, Anglo-Indian Relations In North America to 1763 and An Analysis of the Royal Proclamation of 7 October 1763, Indian and Northern Affairs Canada, Research Branch, 1981, 356.
  9. ^ Borrows, "Wampum," 158–159.
  10. ^ Quoted in Native Liberty, Crown Sovereignty: The Existing Aboriginal Right of Self-Government in Canada, Bruce Clark. (Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1990), 81.
  11. ^ Borrows, "Wampum," 160.
  12. ^ Borrows, "Wampum," 164.
  13. ^ Borrows, "Wampum," 165.
  14. ^ Woody Holton, "The Ohio Indians and the Coming of the American Revolution in Virginia", The Journal of Southern History', Vol. 60, No. 3, (August 1994), 453–78.
Bibliography
  • Abernethy, Thomas Perkins. Western Lands and the American Revolution. Originally published 1937. New York: Russell & Russell, 1959.
  • Calloway, Colin. The Scratch of a Pen: 1763 and the Transformation of North America. Oxford University Press, 2006. ISBN 0-19-530071-8.

Further reading

  • Cashin, Edward J. "Governor Henry Ellis and the Transformation of British North America." Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1994.
  • Lawson, Philip. The Imperial Challenge: Quebec and Britain in the Age of the American Revolution. Montreal/Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1989.
  • Roth, Christopher F. (2002) "Without Treaty, without Conquest: Indigenous Sovereignty in Post-Delgamuukw British Columbia." Wicazo Sa Review, vol. 17, no. 2, pp. 143–165.
  • Stonechild, Blair A. "Indian-White Relations in Canada, 1763 to the Present." In Encyclopedia of North American Indians, ed. Frederick E. Hoxie, 277–81. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1996.
  • Tousignant, Pierre. "The Integration of the Province of Quebec into the British Empire, 1763–91. Part 1: From the Royal Proclamation to the Quebec Act." In Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 4. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1980.