When on 13 Mar. 1780, during the debate on Burke’s motion to abolish the Board of Trade, William Eden called for the ‘living testimony’, the ‘plain sense and information’, which might be had from John Pownall, Burke, while declining to seek opinions on the utility of the office from one ‘who had made a fortune’ by continuing in it for thirty years, acknowledged Pownall to be ‘an able, intelligent, honest man, of remarkable probity’.
Mr. Pownall further humbly submits to your Majesty drafts of two other letters to the Admiralty upon points that appear to be essential, being convinced, that under God, the safety of the British Empire depends in the present situation of America upon your Majesty’s fixed resolution to exert every effort of vigour for reducing your Majesty’s deluded subjects there to a due obedience and submission.
On 8 Aug. 1772 Pownall had written to Dartmouth:
In 1782-3 he was consulted by Shelburne on future commercial policy toward the U.S.A.
