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   soc.culture.irish      More than just beating up your relatives      96,488 messages   

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   Message 95,529 of 96,488   
   Noahide to All   
   Nationality Law in the American Colonies   
   11 Mar 21 16:51:05   
   
   From: noahidebooksforever@gmail.com   
      
   Nationality law in the American Colonies   
   From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   
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   Nationality law in the American colonies preceding the Articles of   
   Confederation was a decentralized early attempt to develop the concept of   
   citizenship among colonial settlers with respect to the major colonial powers   
   of the period. Precedent was    
   largely based on English common law, with jurisdictional discretion afforded   
   to each of the colonies in accordance with the principles of self-governance.   
      
      
   Contents   
   1	Jurisdictional tension between England and the colonies   
   2	Parliamentary naturalization laws   
   3	Colonial naturalization laws   
   4	Post-colonial, pre-constitutional period   
   5	References   
   Jurisdictional tension between England and the colonies   
      
   The Royal Charter of Connecticut, 1662.   
   English common law, under principles of jus sanguinis, viewed English persons   
   and their children in the colonies as full subjects of the king.[1] English   
   common law was less clear on the status of alien residents in the colonies,   
   who generally faced a    
   difficult naturalization process to obtain the same legal rights inhered to   
   natural-born English and their descendants.[2] Issues in early naturalization   
   policy stemmed from the legal relationships between England and its   
   colonies.[3] The strongest legal    
   bonds between England and the American colonies lay in the colonial charters,   
   many of which professed alien residents in the colonies would eventually   
   become “Our Loving subjects and live under Our Allegiance.”[4] Ambiguity   
   in the colonial charters    
   created uncertainty as to whether the authority to naturalize alien residents   
   resided within the colonies themselves or emanated directly from Parliament in   
   London.[5] Legislative bodies from both locations ultimately issued separate   
   and sometimes    
   conflicting naturalization laws, the interaction of which influenced early   
   patterns of non-English immigration to the American colonies.   
      
   Parliamentary naturalization laws   
   Private naturalization before Parliament afforded the highest legal status an   
   alien resident could obtain in the colonies. However, it was an expensive   
   process, costing applicants upwards of 50 pounds during the 1670s. Further, it   
   was exclusive, in that    
   embedded sacramental tests were designed to bar Catholics from subjectship,   
   yet restricted other non-Christians from the benefits of parliamentary   
   naturalization as well.[6] Alternatively, aliens could seek royal denization,   
   which was a more accessible    
   path to permanent residency yet conferred a lesser form of citizenship than   
   private naturalization.[7]   
      
   Religious prejudice, xenophobia and fears of foreign political views, as well   
   as maintenance of an Englishman's superior commercial privileges, all   
   contributed to a conservative approach to early naturalization law. Moreover,   
   Parliament granted these    
   privileges based on individual merit rather than on broader statutory decrees   
   to maintain full control over admissions to the colonies.[8] However, with the   
   passage of the Linen Cloth Act 1663 (15 Cha. 2, c. 15), the difficulties of   
   naturalization    
   started to be modified toward favoring categories of aliens who might prove of   
   particular benefit to the state.[9]   
      
   The first general naturalization law, providing a simple administrative   
   process for obtaining naturalization appeared when Parliament passed Foreign   
   Protestants Naturalization Act 1708[10] The act required declarations of   
   allegiance and supremacy from    
   aliens and, similar to the private naturalization process, imposed sacramental   
   tests to restrict non-Protestant applicants. One key innovation of the statute   
   was to drastically reduce the application fee to just one schilling.[11] Tory   
   opposition to    
   liberal immigration policies led to the act’s eventual repeal in 1712,   
   though the repeal did not invalidate naturalizations that had already been   
   granted.[12]   
      
   In light of the Tory position, Parliament faced growing pressure from the   
   colonies to open immigration to fulfill its major need, agrarian   
   labor.[13][14] During the colonial period, many were interested in promoting   
   immigration, including the Crown,    
   proprietors, colonial governments, landowners, and agents, all saw in it a   
   profitable enterprise, since immigration would promote settlement, increase   
   the value of landed holdings, and create a protective barrier for the colonies   
   against Spanish, French,    
   and Indians. Each interested party promoted immigration in their own way.   
   Colonial assemblies soon became active in this work, and remained so   
   throughout the colonial period.[15] In 1740 Parliament responded with a more   
   liberal and enlightened policy[16]    
   that greatly eased and broadened the ability of aliens in the American   
   colonies to become naturalized subjects of Britain.   
      
      
   William Penn, who as early as 1700 argued in favor of a general naturalization   
   act for the American colonies   
   The Plantation Act 1740 supplanted the private naturalization process in which   
   aliens in the colonies had to travel to London to appeal for subjectship on a   
   costly, case-by-case basis.[17] After 1740, aliens could locally apply for   
   naturalization within    
   the colonies so long as they had resided there for seven years or more,   
   without being absent more than two consecutive months.[18] Further, the Act   
   encompassed all of British America, as opposed to the previous policy of only   
   conferring subjectship    
   within the colony from which it was requested.[19] The Act also capped the   
   application cost at two shillings, yet required applicants to take an oath of   
   allegiance to the Crown and profess their Protestant belief in open court.[18]   
      
   The religious elements of the 1740 Act still favored Protestant applicants at   
   the expense of Catholic applicants, yet new exemptions for Quakers, Jews and,   
   later, Moravians left room for certain non-Protestants to become naturalized   
   subjects of England.[   
   20] Though localized opposition to Jewish applicants occurred following the   
   1740 law, competition for new settlers among the colonies prevented their   
   total exclusion from the naturalization process, as alien residents could   
   travel to more permissive    
   colonies to apply for subjectship.[21] For example, Rhode Island, New York and   
   Georgia each made it a deliberate and established part of their public policy   
   to grant such rights to Jewish applicants, and became the colonies where Jews   
   settled in the    
   largest numbers.[22]   
      
      
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