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Trade, Politics, and Revolution: South Carolina and Britain’s Atlantic Commerce, 1730–1790: Bibliography

Trade, Politics, and Revolution: South Carolina and Britain’s Atlantic Commerce, 1730–1790
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table of contents
  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. List of Illustrations
  7. Acknowledgments
  8. Notes on the Text
  9. Chronology
  10. Dramatis Personae
  11. Introduction: “A large territory on the Atlantic Ocean, in a temperate latitude”—South Carolina and Great Britain
  12. Chapter One: “The Metropolis of South Carolina”, London Lobbying and Charles Town Commerce
    1. Mercantilism and “Interest”
    2. Defense, Rice, and the Emergence of a Carolina Lobby in London
    3. Getting into the Carolina Trade
    4. Trading in Charles Town
    5. Relocating to Britain
  13. Chapter Two: “Friends to Assist at Home”, London’s Carolina Trade in the 1740s and 1750s
    1. “Carolina merchants”: The Composition and Organization of London’s Carolina Trade
    2. “Transactions with a few well chosen Friends”: The Concentration of London’s Carolina Trade
    3. “For which this Province is Greatly Oblig’d”: London Lobbying in the Early 1740s
    4. Trade and the “National Interest”
    5. “Indefatigable in the service of this Province”: The 1748 Indigo Bounty
  14. Chapter Three: “Cankers to the Riches of a Country”?, Transatlantic Absenteeism in Colonial South Carolina
    1. Conceptions of Absenteeism in Colonial South Carolina
    2. Acquiring Lands in South Carolina
    3. Retaining Assets in South Carolina
    4. Returns on Absentee-Owned Plantations
    5. Absenteeism and Agency
  15. Chapter Four: “From Humble & Moderate Fortunes to Great Affluence”, The Transatlantic Carolina Trade and Imperial Crises
    1. “Supported by the Whole Body of Merchants in London”
    2. “The important services they have done to America in General”
    3. “Commissions & profits arising from such Trade”
    4. “Join to quench the growing Evil”
    5. “I don’t know that we have a Zealous friend or Advocate among the Merchants”
    6. “Parties in the attempt against us”
  16. Chapter Five: The Voyage of the Lord North, American Independence, Anglo-Carolinian Trade, and Unfinished Business
    1. “The usual intercourse of Commerce be again resumed”: London Merchants and Wartime Lobbying
    2. “Enjoyment on one side, and Restrictions on the other”: The Restoration of Anglo-American Trade
    3. “Commerce again shall lift her drooping head”: The Resumption of Anglo-Carolinian Trade
    4. “Members and heads of a British faction”: Anti-British Sentiment in Charleston
    5. “Manifestly far from being cordial Friends”: Echoes of Prewar Trade
    6. “After a Storm at Sea is over”: British Merchants and the Postwar Carolina Trade
    7. “No lawful impediments”: Pursuing Prewar Debts in Britain and South Carolina in the 1780s
    8. “Carolina disappointments”: Assessing the Debts in the 1790s
  17. Conclusion: “Let me have done with American lands”
  18. Abbreviations
  19. Notes
  20. Bibliography
  21. Index

Page 229 →Bibliography

Primary Sources

Archival Sources

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  •   Letterbook of Robert Raper, 1759–70. Microfilm.
  • British Library, London
  • Add. MS. 15154–5. Minute Books of the Free British Fishery Society.
  • Add. MS. 38221.
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  • Candlewick wardmote inquest minutes, 1676–1802.
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  • A/2807–8: Articles of agreement between Edward Lewis, William Minet and Charles Crokatt in connection with mortgage on land and messuage in Old Bethlem, London.
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  • ACC 0813/012: Lease between Richard Shubrick and William Edmundson, and Thomas Skinner for land in Enfield.
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  • CO5/2: Original correspondence, Board of Trade, 1777–1807.
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  • CO5/509–11: Board of Trade and Secretaries of State: America and West Indies, original correspondence—Shipping returns, South Carolina, 1721–35 to 1764–65.
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  • CO5/651: Board of Trade and Secretaries of State: America and West Indies, original correspondence—Board of Trade, Georgia, 1769–72.
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  • Prob. 11/1000. 20 August 1774. Will of Richard Grubb, merchant of St. Edmund the King, London.
  • Prob. 11/1029. 11 March 1777. Will of James Crokatt.
  • Prob. 11/1051. 16 March 1779. Will of Margaret Colleton, Hill Street, St. George, Hanover Square, London.
  • Prob. 11/1058. 6 November 1779. Will of William Stone, merchant of Walsall, Staffordshire.
  • Prob. 11/1142. 20 May 1786. Will of William Greenwood, merchant of St. Stephen Walbrook, London.
  • Prob. 11/1149. 2 January 1787. Will of Samuel Carne of Kensington, Middlesex.
  • Prob. 11/1164. 14 March 1788. Will of Gilbert Ross, merchant of Fenchurch St., London.
  • Prob. 11/1171. 13 October 1788. Will of Charles Ogilvie, merchant of St. Clement Danes, Middlesex.
  • Prob. 11/1192. 17 May 1790. Will of Andrew Pringle of Clifton, Gloucestershire.
  • Prob. 11/1200. 17 January 1791. Will of Nathaniel Newberry, merchant of London.
  • Prob. 11/1285. 20 February 1797. Will of Isaac King, late merchant, gentleman of St. Michaels Hill, Bristol, Gloucestershire.
  • Prob. 11/1289. 29 April 1797. Will of Richard Shubrick, of Enfield, Middlesex.
  • Prob. 11/1326. 20 June 1799. Will of James Poyas, merchant of London.
  • Prob. 11/1467. 19 September 1807. Will of Christopher Rolleston of Watnall, Nottinghamshire.
  • Prob. 11/634. 6 December 1729. Will of Stephen Godin, merchant of St. Peter le Poer, London.
  • Prob. 11/677. 5 June 1736. Will of John Walter of Woking, Surrey.
  • Prob. 11/703. 28 June 1740. Will of William Payne, gentleman, of Winterbourne, Gloucestershire.
  • Prob. 11/781. 4 July 1750. Will of John Crokatt, merchant, Charles Town.
  • Prob. 11/785. 25 January 1751. Will of Samuel Wragg, merchant of Charles Town, South Carolina.
  • Prob. 11/810. 2 August 1754. Will of John Nickleson, merchant of London.
  • Prob. 11/810. 8 August 1754. Will of Elizabeth Shubrick, wife of Richard Shubrick.
  • Prob. 11/879. 16 August 1762. Will of Jane Shubrick, widow of Mile End Green, London.
  • Prob. 11/900. 8 August 1764. Will of John Beswicke, merchant, London.
  • Prob. 11/912. 12 September 1765. Will of Richard Shubrick, merchant of St. Stephen Walbrook, London.
  • Prob. 11/963. 29 January 1771. Will of George Udny of Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London
  • T1/424: Treasury Board Papers and In-Letters.
  • T1/425: Treasury Board Papers and In-Letters.
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  • T1/449: Treasury Board Papers and In-Letters.
  • T1/453: Treasury Board Papers and In-Letters.
  • T1/480: Treasury Board Papers and In-Letters.
  • T79/10: Treasury, American Loyalist Claims Commission Records.
  • T79/11: Treasury, American Loyalist Claims Commission Records.
  • T79/20: Treasury, American Loyalist Claims Commission Records.
  • T79/21: Treasury, American Loyalist Claims Commission Records.
  • T79/30: Treasury, American Loyalist Claims Commission Records.
  • T79/36: Treasury, American Loyalist Claims Commission Records.
  • T79/37: Treasury, American Loyalist Claims Commission Records.
  • T79/38: Treasury, American Loyalist Claims Commission Records.
  • T79/43: Treasury, American Loyalist Claims Commission Records.
  • T79/5: Treasury, American Loyalist Claims Commission Records.
  • South Carolina Department of Archives and History, Columbia
  • Journals of His Majesty’s Council, 1721–74. Microfilm.
  • Letterbook of Charles Garth, 1766–75. Microfilm.
  • Letterbook of James Wright and Charles Garth, 1758–66. Microfilm.
  • Memorials of South Carolina Land Titles, 1731–75.
  • Middleton Family Papers. Microfilm.
  • Miscellaneous Records. Microfilm.
  • Public Register, South Carolina, Conveyance books [Charleston Deeds].
  • St. Philip’s Parish, Charleston. Church Wardens’ Account Book, 1725–52. Microfilm.
  • St. Philip’s Parish, Charleston. Parish Registers, 1714–1810. Microfilm.
  • St. Philip’s Parish, Charleston. Vestry Minutes, 1732–74. Microfilm.
  • South Carolina Court of Common Pleas, Judgement Rolls.
  • South Carolina Historical Society, Charleston
  • Alexander Fraser Papers.
  • Peter Manigault Papers.
  • John Martin Papers.
  • Middleton Family Papers.
  • Ogilvie-Forbes Papers.
  • Pinckney Family Papers. Microform.
  • Pringle-Freeman Correspondence.
  • Pringle Garden Family Papers.
  • William Loughton Smith Papers.
  • South Caroliniana Library, University of South Carolina, Columbia
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  • William Ancrum Letterbook and Accounts, 1776–82.
  • Ball Family Papers.
  • Colleton Family Papers.
  • Margaret Colleton Papers.
  • James Glen Papers, 1757–66.
  • James Grant Papers.
  • Isaac King Letterbook, 1783–97.
  • Isaac King Papers.
  • Manigault Family Papers, 1753–56.
  • Will of Sarah Nicholson, 1770.
  • Charles Pinckney Papers.
  • Page 232 →Philip Porcher Account Book, 1778–80.
  • Philip Porcher correspondence with William Manning, 1781–82.
  • Robert Raper Account Book.
  • Alexander Rose Papers.
  • Taylor Family Papers.
  • Williams-Chesnut-Manning Papers, 1766–1805.
  • Samuel Wragg Papers.

Newspapers

  • Craftsman or Says Weekly Journal (London).
  • Daily Advertiser (London).
  • Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser (London).
  • General Advertiser (London).
  • General Advertiser and Morning Intelligencer (London).
  • General Evening Post (London).
  • Lloyd’s Evening Post (London).
  • London Chronicle.
  • London Courant and Westminster Chronicle.
  • London Evening Post.
  • London Gazette.
  • London Recorder or Sunday Gazette.
  • Middlesex Journal and Evening Advertiser (London).
  • Morning Chronicle and London Advertiser.
  • Morning Herald and Daily Advertiser (London).
  • Morning Post and Daily Advertiser (London).
  • Oracle and Public Advertiser (London).
  • Oracle Bell’s New World (London).
  • Public Advertiser (London).
  • Public Ledger or The Daily Register of Commerce and Intelligence (London).
  • Read’s Weekly Journal or British Gazetteer (London).
  • Royal Gazette (Charleston).
  • Royal South Carolina Gazette (Charleston).
  • St. James’s Chronicle or the British Evening Post (London).
  • South Carolina and American General Gazette (Charleston).
  • South Carolina Gazette (Charleston).
  • South Carolina Gazette and Country Journal (Charleston).
  • South Carolina Gazette and General Advertiser (Charleston).
  • South Carolina Weekly Gazette (Charleston).
  • Whitehall Evening Post or London Intelligencer (London).
  • World (London).

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Theses

  • Beaumont, Andrew D. M. “‘Ambitious Men of Modest Means’: Colonial Administration under the Earl of Halifax, 1748–1761.” University of Oxford, 2007.
  • Edelson, Scott David. “Colour and Enterprise: South Carolina Indigo and the Atlantic Economy, 1745–1795.” University of Oxford, 1994.
  • Hall, John A. “Quieting the Storm: The Establishment of Order in Post-Revolutionary South Carolina.” University of Oxford, 1989.
  • Kim, Daeryoon. “Merchants, Politics and the Atlantic Imperial Community, 1763–1783.” University of Oxford, 2006.
  • Pettigrew, William A. “Free to Enslave: Politics and the Escalation of Britain’s Transatlantic Slave Trade, 1688–1714.” University of Oxford, 2007.
  • Sandy, Laura. “Between Planter and Slave: The Social and Economic Role of Plantation Overseers in Colonial Virginia and South Carolina.” University of Manchester, 2006.

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