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1653 March 10. Whitehall. |
202. Council of State to our loving friends the Governors and
Commissioners of the United Colonies, New England. The Parliament having committed to us the especial care of the Plantations,
and having considered the occasion the Commonwealth has for
tar, masts, deals, and other materials, and how they may be
supplied from New England if the discouragements upon those
commodities are removed, conceive ourselves obliged to do what
we can to take away all obstructions and give all due encouragement by promoting and augmenting the manufacture there,
so as not only to render the supplies more certain and less dependent upon other countries, but also to increase the trade and
welfare of that plantation, and as we have appointed a ship to be
fitted out and sent to New England for 10,000 barrels of tar, as
also other commodities, we desire you will use all possible means
to provide them. Signed by Salisbury, President. Annexed, |
202. i. Account of the sale of goods, amounting to 1,681l. 4s. 2d.,
received from aboard the King David. Signed by Thos.
Clarke and Thos. Lake. Boston, New England, 1653,
Oct. 29. |
202. ii. Another account of money received for masts, tar, and
other commodities shipped for England, amounting to
1,368l. 16s. 1d. Signed by Clarke and Lake. Eight
passengers to England by the King David paid 5l. each,
viz., Mrs. Susanna Evans and two others, Jacob Mygate
and Step. Heman, G. Horden, Mrs. Jorden, and Sam.
Whytfield. Boston, 1653, Nov. 7. |
202. iii. Invoice of goods, consisting of hose, serges, cloth, rugs,
blankets, bolsters, stuffs, iron ware, &c., sent to New
England for the account of the Commonwealth aboard
the Augustine, Capt. Robt. Fenn, to be disposed of by
Maj. Sedgwick and Lieut. Leverett, to procure masts.
1654, Feb. 11. |
202. iv. Account of disbursement on the King David in New
England and at her return at London. 1654, Mar. 6.
Together, 25 pp. [Col. Papers, Vol. 32, Nos. 6, 6, I.–IV.] |
Oct. 6. |
203. Order of the Council of State. That Mr. Lawrence,
Mr. Strickland, and Charles Wolseley and Col. Jones, or any two
of them, be appointed a Committee to consider of that part of the
letter written from Mr. Hooke [Rev. William Hooke of New
Haven] which relates to the practise of the Dutch with the natives
in New England, and to speak with Mr. Winslow concerning that
business, and upon consideration had of the state of the whole
matter, to report to the Council what they judge fit to be done
thereupon. [Dom. Interregnum, I. 71, p. 50.] |