The Committee of Secret Correspondence to Stephen Cleveland
	LS: American Philosophical Society
	<Philadelphia, July 30, 1776: Bradford has informed us that he
	has outfitted the Dispatch and appointed you commander; “he
	gives you an extreme good Character.” You will receive this from
	John Philip Merkle, and you will be bound by the following
	
	instructions until they are superseded: You will give Bradford bills
	of lading for the cargo, which is consigned to Merkle, whom you
	will receive on board. You will make for France, put in at the first
	convenient port (Nantes or Bordeaux may be the safest), and there
	unload such of the cargo as Merkle wishes to sell. We enclose to
	Bradford a packet, which he will give you, addressed to Messrs.
	Samuel and J. H. Delap at Bordeaux. If you are captured, throw
	the packet overboard. If you land at Bordeaux deliver it to the
	Delaps; if you land at another port forward it by the best means
	available, tell them where Merkle is ordering you to call, and ask
	them how to address letters to Silas Deane so that they will surely
	reach him. Merkle will, we expect, order you on to Amsterdam;
	you will deliver the remainder of the cargo at such ports as he
	directs and, when all is unloaded, will receive whatever goods,
	arms, and ammunition he wishes to ship. You are free to arm the
	brigantine as completely as you please, and to take on as many
	good seamen as you can accommodate.
	Inform the Delaps and Deane how to reach you and when you
	intend to return. You will, we believe, receive from them letters
	and packets for us, which are to be seen by no one and thrown
	overboard if need be. When you are fitted and loaded, and have
	received your dispatches from Merkle, you are to make for the first
	safe harbor you find in the United States, and there enlist the help
	of local authorities in forwarding promptly to us whatever letters
	and packets you bring. Tell us the condition of your vessel, and
	we will give you further orders. We send you a commission, a
	book of regulations about captures, and a list of continental agents
	in case you take prizes. But prizes are not your object; a fast and
	safe voyage is. “In time your utmost Ambition may be gratified
	provided Merit leads the Way to Promotion.”
	You may accommodate free of charge any American masters,
	
	mates, or seamen who want passage. Merkle will perhaps think it
	proper to make your ship French or Dutch, and to clear it for the
	West Indies. You are to co-operate with him, and do all you can
	to please him during the voyage. Signed by Franklin, Benjamin
	Harrison, and Robert Morris.>