My parents had to write some software for a municipality in northern New Hampshire on the Canadian border. It is not that they had to wonder how to pay taxes to Canada, but if they had to pay them to the country of Indian Stream?
The
Republic of Indian Stream or
Indian Stream Republic was an
unrecognized constitutional republic in
North America, along the section of the
border that divides the Canadian province of
Quebec from the U.S. state of
New Hampshire. It existed from July 9, 1832, to August 5, 1835. Described as
"Indian Stream Territory, so-called" by the
United States census-taker in 1830, the area was named for
Indian Stream, a small watercourse. It had an organized elected government and constitution and served about three hundred citizens.
The area was first settled by Europeans under a land grant, not from the King of Great Britain, but from the
St. Francis Indian chief, called King Philip by his white neighbors, after the
King Philip who had led many successful raids on
New England settlements during the 1670s. I believe the first Dowgin came during that time to be killed in the King Phillip War.
Also, the establishment of Indian Stream as an independent nation was, essentially, the result of the ambiguous boundary between the
United States and
Canada as defined in the 1783
Treaty of Paris. There were three possible interpretations of where "the northwesternmost head of the
Connecticut River"
might be. As a result, the area (in and around the three tributaries
that fed into the head of the Connecticut River) was not definitively
under the jurisdiction of either the United States or Canada.
Both sides sent in
tax-collectors
and debt-collecting sheriffs. The double taxation angered the
population, and the Republic was formed to put an end to the issue until
such time as the United States and Great Britain could reach a
settlement on the boundary line. Some of the citizenry considered Indian
Stream to be part of the U.S. but not a part of New Hampshire. The
Indian Stream assembly declared independence on July 9, 1832, and
produced a constitution. So you see why my parents were confused...
The Constitution of Indian Stream states in "Part Second - Form of Government":
- "The people inhabiting the Territory formerly called Indian Stream
Territory do hereby solemnly and mutually agree with each other to form
themselves into a body politic by the name of Indian Stream and in that
capacity to exercise all the powers of a free, sovereign and independent
state, so far as it relates to our own internal Government till such
time as we can ascertain to what government we properly belong."
However, the independence declaration did not cause the sheriff of
Coos County
to cease his involvement in affairs, with later events leading to an
impending invasion by New Hampshire. On July 30, 1835, this sheriff
asked for the
militia. Two companies of infantry from the towns around
Colebrook met at
Stewartstown,
ready to march into the disputed territory. The sheriff preceded them
and, on August 4, met with between 30 and 40 members of the assembly, to
whom he issued an ultimatum. Threatened with forcible occupation, most
of the gathered assembly capitulated and relented to being annexed by
New Hampshire.
The Republic ceased to operate independently the next day when five leaders of Indian Stream wrote to a Canadian official in
Sherbrooke,
Lower Canada,
that, with a response to their petition for protection by the British
not having occurred in time, Indian Stream had agreed to annexation by
New Hampshire. One of the "Streamers", Richard I. Blanchard, agreed to
serve as a deputy sheriff of Coos County. The militia stayed in
Stewartstown and dispersed to their homes on August 6.
The annexation of Indian Stream by New Hampshire did not resolve the
land dispute, however. Local British officials took a dim view of the
annexation. An incident soon tested the situation. In October 1835,
Blanchard led a small party to arrest John Tyler for an unpaid
hardware-store debt. After the arrest, Tyler was freed on the road back
to Coos County by a group of his neighbors. In reporting the incident to
the British magistrate, Tyler falsely stated under oath that the
location of his arrest was Drayton, Lower Canada.
The magistrate then issued a warrant for Blanchard's arrest, which was
carried out by a deputy and a few members of the Canadian faction of
Streamers, who returned with Blanchard toward the magistrate's house in
Lower Canada.
Along the way, a group of Streamers stopped them in the road, rescued
Blanchard and returned with their freed comrade to Indian Stream. The
deputy's party continued on to the magistrate's house. Several hours
later, there was a commotion in the road nearby from a posse of armed
Streamers, emboldened by liquor, bent on making an impression. The
invading posse shot the deputy through the thigh and then captured the
hobbled magistrate with a blow of a saber to his scalp during a
struggle. They returned to
Canaan, Vermont, with the bleeding magistrate as prisoner, where local leaders treated his wound and released him immediately.
In the aftermath, a detachment of fifty New Hampshire militia,
including troops and officers, occupied the territory from mid-November
until February 18, 1836.
This
international incident
caused a diplomatic crisis. The British ambassador to the United States
protested to President Jackson and the Secretary of State.
Both governments, appalled at the idea of war over a matter so trivial
as a hardware-store debt, determined to take measures so that matters
did not escalate, and an uneasy peace endured in the years preceding the
conclusion of a treaty settling the border.
In July, 1837,
Lord Palmerston
in London dismissed all charges in the British judiciary system arising
from the incident and reiterated the British position that the
territory was part of Canada.
The area was still described as Indian Stream at the time of the
U.S. census
taken on June 1, 1840; the local population totaled 315. Upon petition
by the residents, the area was incorporated as the town of
Pittsburg in 1840.
In 1842, the land dispute was definitively resolved by the
Webster–Ashburton Treaty, and the land was assigned to New Hampshire. However, the 1845 Lewis Robinson
Map of New Hampshire based on the latest authorities, shows the boundary north of the town of
Clarksville but just
south of modern-day Pittsburg.
This reminds me of some Marx Brother movie. Geez...
~Tyler
To find out more about Tyler visit
Salem House Press and buy Tyler's latest book "
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