Charles McLean Andrews

British Committees, Commissions, and Councils of Trade and Plantations, 1622-1675


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       Charles McLean Andrews

      British Committees, Commissions, and Councils of Trade and Plantations, 1622-1675

      Published by Good Press, 2021

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664580399

       CHAPTER I.

       Control of Trade and Plantations Under James I and Charles I.

       CHAPTER II.

       Control of Trade and Plantations During the Interregnum.

       CHAPTER III.

       The Proposals of the Merchants: Noell and Povey.

       CHAPTER IV.

       Committees and Councils Under the Restoration.

       CHAPTER V.

       The Plantation Councils of 1670 and 1672.

       APPENDIX I.

       Instructions, Board of Trade, 1650.

       APPENDIX II.

       Instructions for the Council for Foreign Plantations, 1670–1672.

       Additional Instructions for the Council for Foreign Plantations, 1670–1672.

       APPENDIX III.

       Draft of Instructions for the Council of Trade and Foreign Plantations, 1672–1674.

       APPENDIX IV.

       Heads of Business of Councils, 1670–1674.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      In considering the subject which forms the chief topic of this paper, we are not primarily concerned with the question of settlement, intimately related though it be to the larger problem of colonial control. We are interested rather in the early history of the various commissions, councils, committees, and boards appointed at one time or another in the middle of the seventeenth century for the supervision and management of trade, domestic, foreign, and colonial, and for the general oversight of the colonies whose increase was furthered, particularly after 1650, in largest part for commercial purposes. The coupling of the terms "trade" and "foreign plantations" was due to the prevailing economic theory which viewed the colonies not so much as markets for British exports or as territories for the receipt of a surplus British population—for Great Britain had at that time no surplus population and manufactured but few commodities for export—but rather as sources of such raw materials as could not be produced at home, and of such tropical products as could not be obtained otherwise than from the East and West Indies. The two interests were not, however, finally consolidated in the hands of a single board until 1672, after which date they were not separated until the final abolition of the old Board of Trade in 1782. It is, therefore, to the period before 1675 that we shall chiefly direct our attention, in the hope of throwing some light upon a phase of British colonial control that has hitherto remained somewhat obscure. Familiar as are many of the facts connected with the early history of Great Britain's management of trade and the colonies, it is nevertheless true that no attempt has been made to trace in detail the various experiments undertaken by the authorities in England in the interest of trade and the plantations during the years before 1675. Many of the details are, and will always remain, unknown, nevertheless it is possible to make some additions to our knowledge of a subject which is more or less intimately related to our early colonial history.