(Replying to PARENT post)
Source: Grande (2016) "Yankees in Haiti: Boston Merchant Trade in Revolutionary Saint-Domingue"
> "Future patriot leaders such as Samuel Adams, for example, joined the merchants in their protests against the Sugar Act. In a letter to a Massachusetts customs agent, Adams expressed many Bostonians’ uneasiness “at several Acts of Parliament lately made, by which their Trade is greatly obstructed.” Should these acts stay in place, Adams feared that colonial trade “must soon be ruined.” Adams linked the potential ruin of the Boston economy to Parliament’s enhanced customs procedures and the new duty on foreign molasses. He argued that the “English West India Islands do not produce sufficient for the Consumption and Trade of the Continent,” and that the “Duty of three Pence per Gallon on foreign Molasses amounts to a full prohibition, and must soon put a Stop to that Branch.” In other words, the duty on foreign molasses would force Boston merchants away from foreign colonies like Saint-Domingue and to the British West Indies; and the dearth of molasses exported by the British sugar islands would spell the end to Boston’s rum industry."
> "Adams continued by asserting that damage to the molasses trade would affect other industries as well. First and foremost would be the fishing industry. He described the molasses trade and fishing industry as “mutual Supports to each other.” Boston merchants had long been accustomed to trading fish for molasses in Saint-Domingue. If confined to the British West Indies, then the highly productive New England fisheries would suffer from low fish prices due to chronic oversupply. A failing New England fishery would mean added unemployment in an already depressed economy."
See also "Smuggler Nation" by Peter Andreas.
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13689883-smuggler-nation
(Replying to PARENT post)