"We apprehend that, as Freemen and English subjects, we have an indisputable title to the same privileges and immunities with those of our fellow-subjects who reside in the interior [eastern] counties... and therefore, that the dividing of the province into counties, without giving them even representation in the Assembly... is oppressive, and injurious, and a grievance of which we have just cause to complain...
During the late Indian war, the frontier inhabitants were left exposed to the savage cruelty of the enemy, and suffered unspeakable distresses... while the Assembly, instead of providing for our defense, spent their time in disputing about their own privileges..."
— "A Declaration and Remonstrance of the Distressed and Bleeding Inhabitants of the Province of Pennsylvania," 1764
The sentiments expressed in the excerpt most directly reflect which of the following persistent sources of conflict in eighteenth-century North America?
- ADisputes over the balance of power between state governments and a centralized federal authority
- Tensions between backcountry settlers and coastal elites over representation and frontier defenseCevap
- CDebate between political factions regarding the federal government's role in commercial expansion
- DCultural and religious disagreements between New England Puritans and Chesapeake tobacco planters