[20] C. O. 1: 22, f. 191, Willoughby to Privy Council, May 30, 1668.
[21] _Ibid._, 20, f. 149, Willoughby to the king, May 32, 1666.
[22] _Ibid._, 21, f. 170, Willoughby to the king, July, 1667.
[23] C. O. 1: 21, f. 222, Willoughby to Williamson, September 17, 1667.
[24] _Ibid._, f. 209, pet.i.tion of the representatives of Barbadoes to the king, September 5, 1667. This doc.u.ment and Willoughby"s letter of September 17, 1667, also urge very strongly that the bars of the Navigation Acts be let down in order to permit servants to be imported from Scotland.
[25] The pet.i.tion and these answers are printed in a pamphlet ent.i.tled, "Answer of the Company of Royal Adventurers of England trading into Africa, to the Pet.i.tion and Paper of certain Heads and Particulars thereunto relating exhibited to the Honourable House of Commons by Sir Paul Painter." As to the a.s.sertion that the planters refused to ship their products in the company"s ships there seems to be no very good evidence on either side. Sometimes the company"s vessels were sent home from Barbadoes empty. Upon such occasions the agents always said that there were no goods with which to load them.
[26] C. O. 1: 22, f. 42, answer of Sir Ellis Leighton, secretary of the Royal Adventurers, to the pet.i.tion from Barbadoes of September 5, 1667; C. O. 1: 22, f. 43, proposal of the Royal Adventurers concerning the sale of Negroes in Barbadoes, January, 1668
[27] C. O. 1: 22, f. 204, address of the merchants and planters of Barbadoes now in London, read at the committee of trade, June 16, 1668.
[28] _Ibid._, 23, f. 69, address of the representative of Barbadoes to the king, August 3, 1668.
[29] _Ibid._, f. 42, account of affairs in Barbadoes by Lord Willoughby, July 22, 1668.
[30] P. C. R., Charles II, 8: 294, May 12, 1669.
[31] _Ibid._, 8: 402, August 27, 1669.
[32] _Ibid._, 8: 424, September 28, 1669.
[33] C. O. 1: 27, f. 24, John Reid to Arlington, August 2, 1671.
[34] A. C. R., 75: 106, 108, 109, September 11, November 10, 1671.
[35] These numbers and prices are gleaned from page three of the Barbadoes ledger. A. C. R., 646.
[36] Answer of the Company of Royal Adventurers ... to the Pet.i.tion ... exhibited ... by Sir Paul Painter.
[37] C. O. 29: 1, f. 116, Willoughby to the Lords of the Council, July 9, 1668.
[38] _Ibid._, 1: 25, f. 62, memorial of some princ.i.p.al merchants trading to the plantations, 1670.
[39] _Ibid._, 18, f. 86, Modyford and Colleton to (the Royal Adventurers); C. O. 1: 20, f. 168, Michael Smith to Richard Chaundler, June 11, 1666.
[40] _Ibid._, 22, f. 89, Willoughby to Arlington, March 2, 1668.
[41] _Ibid._, 17, f. 219, Renatus Enys to Bennet, November 1, 1663.
[42] _Ibid._, 29: 1, f. 116, Willoughby to the Lords of the Council, July 9, 1668.
[43] _Ibid._, 1: 22, f. 53, proposals of the inhabitants of Antigua to Governor Willoughby, January 31, 1668.
[44] C. S. P., Col. 1669-1674, p, 204, William Byam to Willoughby, 1670?; C. O. 1: 25, f. 138, Byam to Willoughby, n. d.
[45] C. S. P., Col., 1675-1676, Addenda, p. 125, Cornelius Burough to the Admiralty Commissioners, November 28, 1658.
[46] _Ibid._, 1661-1668, p. 36, narrative of the buying of a shipload of Negroes, June 14, 1661.
[47] C. O. 1: 16, f. 77, Captain Richard Whiting to the officers of his Majesty"s navy, March 10, 1662; C. O. 1: 17, f. 236, pet.i.tion of Colonel G.o.dfrey Ashbey and others to the king, 1663.
[48] _Ibid._, 18, f. 58, instructions to Colonel Modyford, governor of Jamaica, February 18, 1664.
[49] C. O. 1: 18, f. 81, declaration of Sir Thomas Modyford, March 2, 1664.
[50] _Ibid._, f. 135, Modyford to Bennet, May 10, 1664.
[51] _Ibid._, f. 208, report of the Privy Council on Jamaica affairs, August 10, 1664.
[52] A. C. R., 75: 89.
[53] Add. MSS., 12,430, f. 31, Beeston, Journal, February 1, 1664/5.
[54] C. O. 1: 19, f. 31, Lynch to Bennet, February 12, 1665; _ibid._, f. 189, John Style to (Bennet), July 24, 1665.
[55] A. C. R., 869, entries from January 1, 1665/6 to December 31, 1666; _ibid._, 870: 62.
[56] A. C. R., 75: 14, 89.
[57] C. O. 1: 25, f. 127, Modyford to Arlington, (September 20, 1670).
[58] C. S. P., Col., 1669-1674, p. 107, additional propositions made to the Privy Council about Jamaica by Charles Modyford by order of Sir Thomas Modyford, (September 28, 1670).
[59] C. O. 1: 14, f. 56, proposal by Lord Marlborough, 1663.
[60] _Ibid._, 17, f. 28, Thomas Modyford? to his brother, March 30, 1662.
[61] _Ibid._, f. 29, Thomas Modyford? to his brother, April 30, 1662.
[62] C. O. 1: 17, ff. 29, 30, Thomas Modyford to his brother, May 26, 1662.
[63] _Ibid._, f. 32, Thomas Modyford to his brother, September 3, 13, 1662.
[64] _Ibid._, f 32, Thomas Modyford to his brother, September 13, 1662.
[65] _Ibid._, f. 20, pet.i.tion of the Royal Adventurers to the king, January, 1663.
[66] C. O. 1: 17, f. 136, instructions to Lord Willoughby, June 16, 1663.
[67] _Ibid._, f. 227 (the king to the governors of Barbadoes and Jamaica). March 30, 1663. That there was some trouble in deciding just what provisions to make regarding the Spanish trade appears from several unsigned and undated letters to Willoughby with conflicting provisions, but they nearly all mention the exception made in favor of the Royal Company in the letter of March 13, 1663. C. O. 1: 17, f. 22; C. O. 1: 17, ff. 24, 25; C. O. 1: 17, ff. 26, 27; P. C. R., Charles II, 3: 336-338.
[68] C. O. 1: 17, ff. 225, 226, pet.i.tion of the Royal Adventurers to the king, November, 1663.
[69] Willoughby made a rest.i.tution of the 320 in March, 1664. C. O.