*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 54253 ***
A SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF
VIRGINIA, 1607-1699
[Illustration:
A
TRVE RE-
lation of such occur-
rences and accidents of noate as
hath hapned in Virginia since the first
planting of that Collony, which is now
resident in the South part thereof, till
the last returne from
thence.
_Written by Captaine_ Smith _Coronell of the said Collony, to a
worshipfull_ friend of his in England.
[Illustration: Ship]
_LONDON_
Printed for _Iohn Tappe_, and are to bee solde at the Grey-
hound in Paules-Church-yard, by _W.W._
1608
]
A SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF
VIRGINIA, 1607-1699
By
=E. G. Swem=
Librarian Emeritus, William and Mary College
=John M. Jennings=
Director, Virginia Historical Society
with the collaboration of
=James A. Servies=
Reference Librarian of William and Mary College
=Virginia 350th Anniversary Celebration Corporation
Williamsburg, Virginia=
1957
COPYRIGHT© 1957 BY
VIRGINIA 350th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
CORPORATION, WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA
Jamestown 350th Anniversary
Historical Booklet, Number 1
FOREWORD
This bibliography is a modest collection of titles relating to the
life of seventeenth-century Virginia in its broadest interpretation.
It has been compiled with the need in mind of the general reader and
of the student who is just beginning research in the alluring field
of early Virginia history. Numerous titles have been omitted for the
reason that the number of pages allotted to this booklet requires
forbearance and retrenchment. The earnest purpose of the compilers has
been to include a good representation of those books and contributions
in periodicals that have stood the test of time. Again, yielding to
the demands of economy, the titles have been reduced in length from
the full style followed in standard catalogue entries. There is enough
information included in each title to enable the consultant to judge
of the contents of the book to which the title refers, and to learn
its date and size; enough to whet his historical appetite and to cause
him to hasten with joy to the nearest college or reference library,
where he will receive a happy welcome and be shown the books he wishes
in original edition, in reprint, or in reproduced form of photostat,
microfilm, microcard, or microsheet.
The arrangement of titles has been designed for browsing: secondary
works are arranged by author under certain general subjects; primary
materials, following collections of original narratives, by date from
"before 1607" to 1699.
The senior editors wish to acknowledge the cordial cooperation of
Miss Spotswood Hunnicutt, and to extend to our collaborator, Mr.
James A. Servies, Reference Librarian of William and Mary College,
warm gratitude and high praise for the characteristic industry and
enthusiasm he has displayed in every step of this compilation. His
rare gift of discerning bibliographical values has been constantly in
evidence.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Foreword v
Bibliographies and Guides 1
Secondary Works 3
U. S. History--Including History of the South 3
Virginia History--Including Local History 7
Sixteenth-Century Virginia 11
Seventeenth-Century Virginia 12
General 12
Special Topics 18
Jamestown 18
Social Life, Education 19
Economics 21
Law and Politics 22
Agriculture 24
Indians 25
Bacon's Rebellion, 1676 26
Religion 27
The Negro 29
Biography 29
Fiction and Drama 32
Primary Works 34
Collections 34
Before 1607 42
1607-1609 43
1610-1619 46
1620-1629 52
1630-1639 58
1640-1649 59
1650-1659 61
1660-1669 64
1670-1679 66
1680-1689 69
1690-1699 71
BIBLIOGRAPHIES AND GUIDES
=Abbot, William W.= A Virginia chronology, 1585-1783. Williamsburg,
1957. (Jamestown 350th anniversary historical booklet, No. 2.)
=Association for Preservation= of Virginia Antiquities. Yearbook.
Richmond, 1896-date.
=Brock, Robert A.= Virginia, 1606-1689 [with a critical essay on the
sources of information]. In: Winsor, Narrative and critical
history, v. 3, p. 127-68.
=Brown University.= John Carter Brown library. Bibliotheca Americana;
catalogue of the ... library. Providence, R. I., 1919-1931. 3 v.
=Cole, George W.= A catalogue of books relating to the discovery and
early history of North and South America forming a part of the
library of E. D. Church. N. Y., 1907. 5 v.
=Eames, Wilberforce.= A bibliography of Captain John Smith. N. Y.,
1927. 48 p.
[=Kennett, White=]. Bibliothecae Americanae primordia. An attempt
towards laying the foundation of an American library. London,
1713. 283 p.
=Kingsbury, Susan M.= An introduction to the records of the Virginia
company of London with a bibliographical list of the extant
documents. Washington, 1905. 214 p.
Reprinted: Kingsbury, Records of the Virginia company, v. 1, p.
11-206.
=New York (City).= Public Library. List of works in the New York public
library relating to Virginia. N. Y., 1907. 71 p.
=Phillips, Philip L.= List of books relating to America in the
register of the London company of stationers, from 1562-1638. Am.
hist. assoc., Report (1896), v. 1, p. 1249-61.
____ Virginia cartography; a bibliographical description. Washington,
1896. 85 p. (Smithsonian institution publication, no. 1039)
=Sabin, Joseph.= Bibliotheca Americana. A dictionary of books relating
to America, from its discovery to the present time. N. Y.,
1868-1936. 29 v.
=Stanard, William G.= The colonial Virginia register. Albany, N. Y.,
1902. 249 p.
____ The Virginia archives. Am. hist. assoc., Report, 1903, v. 1, p.
645-64.
=Swem, Earl G.= Bibliography of Virginia. Richmond, 1916-19. 3 v.
____ Maps relating to Virginia in the Virginia state library. Richmond,
1914. [33]-263 p. (Virginia state library, Bulletin, v. 7, nos.
2-3.)
____ Virginia historical index. Roanoke, Va., 1934-36. 2 v.
=Torrence, William C.= A trial bibliography of colonial Virginia.
Richmond, 1908-10. 2 v. (Virginia state library, 5th-6th report,
1908-10.)
=Virginia historical society.= Catalogue of the manuscripts. Richmond,
1901. 120 p.
=Virginia State Library.= Calendar of transcripts [in the Virginia
State Library]. Richmond, 1905. 658, xliv p.
=Winsor, Justin.= Maryland and Virginia [with a critical bibliography].
In his: Narrative and critical history, v. 5, p. 259-84.
SECONDARY WORKS
=U. S. History--including History of the South=
=Andrews, Charles M.= The Colonial period of American history. New
Haven, Conn., 1934-38. 4 v.
____ Our earliest colonial settlements, their diversities of origin and
later characteristics. N. Y., 1933. 179 p.
=Avery, Elroy M.= A history of the United States and its people.
Cleveland, 1904-10. 7 v.
=Bancroft, George.= A history of the United States. Boston, 1834-74. 10
v.
=Beer, George L.= The old colonial system, 1660-1754. N. Y., 1912. 2 v.
____ The origins of the British colonial system, 1578-1660. N. Y.,
1908. 438 p.
=Bolton, Herbert E. and T. M. Marshall.= The colonization of North
America, 1492-1783. N. Y., 1920. 609 p.
=Bond, Beverly W.= The quit-rent system in the American colonies. New
Haven, Conn., 1919. 492 p.
=Bozman, John L.= The history of Maryland, from its first settlement in
1633, to the restoration, in 1660. Baltimore, 1837. 2 v.
=Bristol and America=, a record of the first settlers in the colonies
of North America, 1654-1685. London, 1929. 182 p.
=The Cambridge history= of the British empire, v. 1, The old empire
from the beginnings to 1783. Cambridge, 1929. 931 p.
=Chalmers, George.= Political annals of the present united colonies,
from their settlement to the peace of 1763. Book 1, London, 1780.
695 p.
Book 2 published in N. Y. hist. soc., Collections (Publication
fund ser.), 1 (1868), 1-176.
=Channing, Edward.= A history of the United States. N. Y., 1905-25. 6 v.
v. 1, "The planting of a nation in the new world, 1000-1660."
v. 2, "A century of colonial history, 1660-1760."
=Chatterton, Edward K.= English seamen and the colonization of America.
London, 1930. 326 p.
=Chitwood, Oliver P.= A history of colonial America. 2nd ed. N. Y.,
1948. 874 p.
=Crane, Verner W.= The Southern frontier, 1670-1732. Durham, N. C.,
1928. 391 p.
=Craven, Wesley F.= The southern colonies in the seventeenth century,
1607-1689. Baton Rouge, La., 1949. 451 p.
[=Crouch, Nathaniel=] A seventeenth century survey of America. [A
reprint of "The English empire in America," 3rd ed., 1698.]
Prepared by the personnel of the Work projects administration, San
Francisco, Calif., 1940. 124 p.
=Dodd, William E.= The old South; struggles for democracy. N. Y., 1937.
312 p.
=Douglass, William.= A summary, historical and political, of the first
planting, progressive improvements, and present state of the
British settlements in North America, Boston, 1755. 2 v.
=Doyle, John A.= English colonies in America. N. Y., 1882-1907. 5 v.
v. 1, "Virginia, Maryland and the Carolinas."
=Eggleston, Edward.= The transit of civilization from England to
America in the seventeenth century. N. Y., 1901. 344 p.
=Gayley, Charles M.= Shakespeare and the founders of liberty in
America. N. Y., 1917. 270 p.
[=Hall, Fayr=] A short account of the first settlement of the provinces
of Virginia, Maryland, New-York, New-Jersey, and Pennsylvania, by
the British. London, 1735. 22 p.
Reprinted [N. Y., 1922] 22 p.
=Hart, Albert B.=, ed. American history told by contemporaries. N. Y.,
1901-1902. 4 v.
=Hotten, John C.= The original lists of persons of quality; emigrants;
religious exiles; political rebels; serving men sold for a term
of years; apprentices; children stolen; maidens pressed; and
others who went from Great Britain to the American plantations,
1600-1700. London, 1874. 604 p.
=Hubbell, Jay B.= The South in American Literature, 1607-1900. [Durham,
N. C.] 1954. 987 p.
=Ingram, Arthur F. W.= The early English colonies; a summary [of a
lecture] transcribed by Sadler Phillips. Milwaukee, Wis., 1908.
228 p.
=Jernegan, Marcus W.= Laboring and dependent classes in colonial
America, 1607-1783. Chicago [1931] 256 p.
=Johnson, Edgar A. J.= American economic thought in the seventeenth
century. London, 1932. 292 p.
=Johnston, Mary.= Pioneers of the old South; a chronicle of English
colonial beginnings. New Haven, Conn., 1921. 260 p. (Chronicles of
America, v. 5)
=Keith, William.= The history of the British plantations in America.
With a chronological account of the most remarkable things, which
happen'd to the first adventurers ... Part 1. Virginia. London,
1738. 187 p.
=Labaree, Leonard W.= Royal government in America; a study of the
British colonial system before 1783. New Haven, Conn., 1930. 491 p.
=Lodge, Henry C.= A short history of the English colonies in America.
[Rev. ed.] N. Y., 1882. 560 p.
=Morris, Richard B.= Government and labor in early America. N. Y.,
1946. 557 p.
____ Studies in the history of American law, with special reference to
the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. N. Y., 1930. 285 p.
=Morse, Jarvis M.= American beginnings: highlights and sidelights of
the birth of the New World. Washington [1952] 260 p.
=Osgood, Herbert L.= The American colonies in the seventeenth century.
N. Y., 1904-1907. 3 v.
=Piercy, Josephine K.= Studies in literary types in seventeenth century
America (1607-1710). New Haven, Conn., 1939. 360 p. (Yale Studies
in English, v. 91)
=Priestley, Herbert I.= The coming of the white man, 1492-1848. N. Y.,
1929. 411 p.
=Robertson, William.= The history of America, books IX. and X.
containing the history of Virginia to the year 1688; and of New
England to the year 1652. Philadelphia, 1799. 196 p.
First printed 1777, often reprinted.
=The South= in the building of the nation. Richmond [1903-1913]. 13 v.
=Trevelyan, George M.= England under the Stuarts. 12th ed. London,
1925. 566 p.
=Tyler, Lyon G.= The Cavalier in America. [Richmond, 1913.] 19 p.
=Tyler, Moses C.= A history of American literature during the colonial
time. N. Y., 1897. 2 v.
=Wertenbaker, Thomas J.= The first Americans, 1607-1690. N. Y., 1927.
358 p. (A history of American life, v. 2)
=Wilson, Woodrow.= A history of the American people. [New ed.] N.Y.,
1917. 10 v.
=Winsor, Justin=, ed. Narrative and critical history of America.
Boston, 1884-89. 8 v.
=Wissler, Clark= [and others]. Adventurers in the wilderness. New
Haven, Conn., 1925. 369 p. (Pageant of America, v. 1)
=Virginia History--including Local History=
=Abernethy, Thomas P.= Three Virginia frontiers. Baton Rouge, La.,
1940. 96 p.
(The W. L. Fleming lectures in Southern history, Louisiana State
Univ., 1940)
=Andrews, Matthew P.= Virginia, the Old Dominion. N. Y., 1937. 664 p.
=Armes, Ethel M.= Stratford hall, the great house of the Lees.
Richmond, 1936. 575 p.
=Association for the= preservation of Virginia antiquities. The old
lighthouse at Cape Henry, Virginia; an account of early efforts to
establish a lighthouse at entrance to Chesapeake Bay, 1607, 1789,
1947. Norfolk, 1947. 16 p.
=Beverley, Robert.= The history of Virginia. 2nd ed. London, 1722. 284
p.
Reprinted: Richmond, 1855. 264 p.; Chapel Hill, N. C., 1947. 366
p. First ed.: London, 1705.
=Boddie, John B.= Colonial Surry. Richmond, 1948. 249 p.
=Bruce, Philip A.= [and others] History of Virginia. Chicago, 1924. 6 v.
"Colonial period, by Philip A. Bruce," v. 1.
____ The Virginia Plutarch. Chapel Hill, N. C., 1929. 2 v.
=Burk, John D.= The history of Virginia, from its first settlement to
the commencement of the revolution. Petersburg, Va., 1822. 3 v.
Documents, &c. [relating to Bacon's rebellion], v. 2, p. 247-74.
Papers relating to the mission for procuring a more perfect
charter [1674-76], v. 2, appendix, p. xxxiii-lxii.
=Campbell, Charles.= History of the colony and ancient dominion of
Virginia. Philadelphia, 1860. 765 p.
=Chandler, Julian A. C. and Travis B. Thames.= Colonial Virginia.
Richmond, 1907. 388 p.
____ Makers of Virginia history. N. Y. [1904] 347 p.
=Clark, Charles B.= The Eastern Shore of Maryland and Virginia. N. Y.,
[1950] 3 v.
=Conway, Moncure D.= Barons of the Potomack and the Rappahannock. N.
Y., 1892. 290 p.
=Cooke, John E.= Virginia; a history of the people. [New ed.] Boston,
1903. 535 p.
=Fiske, John.= Old Virginia and her neighbors. Boston, 1900. 2 v.
=Foote, William H.= Sketches of Virginia, historical and biographical.
[1st ser.] Philadelphia, 1850. 568 p.
=Gilliam, Sara K.= Virginia's people. A study of the growth and
distribution of the population of Virginia from 1607 to 1943.
[Richmond] 1944. 132 p.
=Glenn, Thomas A.= Some colonial mansions and those who lived in them,
with genealogies of the various families mentioned [ser. 1].
Philadelphia, 1898. 459 p.
=Goodwin, Rutherfoord.= A brief & true report concerning Williamsburg
in Virginia: being an account of the most important occurrences in
that place from its first beginning to the present time.... 3d ed.
Williamsburg [1941] 406 p.
=Howe, Henry.= Historical collections of Virginia. Charleston, S. C.,
1845. 544 p.
=Howison, Robert R.= A history of Virginia, from its discovery and
settlement by Europeans to the present time. Philadelphia, 1848. 2
v.
=Ingle, Edward.= Local institutions of Virginia. Baltimore, 1885. 127
p. (Johns Hopkins univ. stud. in hist. and pol. sci., ser. 3, no.
2-3)
=Johnston, Frederick.= Memorials of old Virginia clerks ... from 1634
to the present time. Lynchburg, 1888. 405 p.
=Jones, Hugh.= The present state of Virginia, from whence is inferred
a short view of Maryland and North Carolina. Ed. by Richard L.
Morton. Chapel Hill, N. C., [1956] 295 p.
First published in 1724; reprinted N. Y., 1865. 151 p.
=Kibler, J. Luther.= The cradle of the nation; ... Jamestown,
Williamsburg and Yorktown. Richmond, 1931. 64 p.
=Martin, Joseph.= A new and comprehensive gazetteer of Virginia, and
the District of Columbia ... to which is added a history of
Virginia from its first settlement to the year 1754 [by W. H.
Brockenbrough]. Charlottesville, Va., 1835. 636 p.
=Maury, Richard L.= The Huguenots in Virginia. [n.p., 1902?] 116 p.
=Meade, William.= Old churches, ministers and families of Virginia.
Philadelphia, 1861. 2 v.
=Page, Thomas N.= The Old Dominion; her making and her manners. N. Y.,
1908. 394 p.
=Pritts, Joseph.= Mirror of olden time border life; embracing a history
of the discovery of America ... Also, history of Virginia,
embracing its first settlement, the progressive movements of
civilization and the establishment of civil government ... [2nd
ed.] Abingdon, Va., 1849. 700 p.
=Robinson, Morgan P.= A complete index to Stith's history of Virginia.
Richmond, 1912. 152 p.
____ Virginia counties. Richmond, 1916. 283 p. (Virginia state library,
Bulletin, v. 9, no. 1-3)
=Stanard, Mary N.= Colonial Virginia, its people and customs.
Philadelphia, 1917. 375 p.
=Starkey, Marion L.= The first plantation; a history of Hampton and
Elizabeth City county, Virginia, 1607-1887. [Hampton, Va.], 1936.
95 p.
=Stith, William.= The history of the first discovery and settlement of
Virginia. Williamsburg, Va., 1747. 341, 34 p.
Reprinted: N. Y., 1865. 341, 34 p.
[=Tyler, Lyon G.=] History of York county in the seventeenth century.
Tyler's quarterly, 1 (1919), 231-75.
=Virginia. Dept. of= conservation. A hornbook of Virginia history;
comp. by J. R. V. Daniel. [Richmond, 1949] 141 p.
____ State historical markers of Virginia. 6th ed. Richmond [1948] 262
p.
=Weddell, Alexander W.= (ed.) A memorial volume of Virginia historical
portraiture, 1585-1830. Richmond, 1930.
=Wertenbaker, Thomas J.= The old South; the founding of American
civilization. N. Y., 1942. 364 p.
=Whitelaw, Ralph T.= Virginia's Eastern Shore. Richmond, 1951. 2 v.
=Willis, Carrie.= The story of Virginia. rev. ed. N. Y., 1950. 392 p.
=Willison, George F.= Behold Virginia: the fifth crown. N. Y., [1951]
422 p.
=Writers' program, Virginia.= Virginia; a guide to the Old Dominion. N.
Y. [1940] 710 p.
=Sixteenth-Century Virginia=
=Lewis, Clifford M. and Albert J. Loomie.= The Spanish Jesuit mission
in Virginia, 1570-1572. Chapel Hill, N. C., 1953. 294 p.
=Lorant, Stefan=, ed. The new world; the first pictures of America
by John White and Jacques Le Moyne and engraved by Theodore De
Bry, with contemporary narratives of the Huguenot settlement in
Florida, 1562-1565, and the Virginia colony, 1585-1590. N. Y.,
1946. 292 p.
=Mook, Maurice A.= The aboriginal population of Tidewater Virginia. Am.
anthropologist (new ser.), 46 (1944), 193-208.
=Sams, Conway W.= The conquest of Virginia: the first attempt. Norfolk,
Va., 1924. 547 p.
=Tarbox, Increase N.= Sir Walter Ralegh and his colony in America.
Including the charter of Queen Elizabeth in his favor, March 25,
1584, with letters, discourses, and narratives of the voyages
made to America at his charges, and descriptions of the country,
commodities, and inhabitants. Boston, 1885. 329 p. (Prince society
publications, v. 15)
=Seventeenth-Century Virginia=
--=General=--
=Alvord, Clarence W. and Lee Bidgood.= The first explorations of the
Trans-Allegheny region by the Virginians, 1650-1674. Cleveland,
1912. 275 p.
=Ames, Susie M.= Studies of the Virginia Eastern Shore in the
seventeenth century. Richmond, 1940. 274 p.
=Andrews, Matthew P.= The soul of a nation; the founding of Virginia
and the projection of New England. N. Y., 1943. 378 p.
=Boddie, John B.= Seventeenth-century Isle of Wight county, Virginia.
Chicago [1938] 756 p.
=Brittingham, Joseph B.= The first trading post at Kicotan (Kecoughtan)
Hampton, Virginia. Hampton, 1947. 23 p.
=Brown, Alexander.= The first republic in America; an account of the
origin of this nation, written from the records then (1624)
concealed by the Council, rather than from the histories then
licensed by the Crown. Boston, 1898. 688 p.
____ The genesis of the United States. A narrative of the movement in
England, 1605-1616, which resulted in the plantation of North
America by Englishmen. Boston, 1890. 2 v.
"Brief biographies," v. 2, p. 811-1068.
____ New views of early Virginia history, 1606-1619. Liberty, Va.,
1886. 18 p.
=Bruce, Philip A.= The economic and social life of Virginia in the
seventeenth century. In: The South in the building of the nation,
v. 1, p. 46-73.
=Chandler, Julian A. C.= The beginnings of Virginia, 1584-1624. In: The
South in the building of the nation, v. 1, p. 1-23.
=Cheyney, Edward P.= Some conditions surrounding the settlement of
Virginia. Am. hist. rev., 12 (1907), 507-28.
=Craven, Wesley F.= Dissolution of the Virginia company; the failure of
a colonial experiment. N. Y., 1932. 350 p.
____ The Virginia company of London, 1606-1624. Williamsburg, 1957.
(Jamestown 350th anniversary historical booklet, No. 5.)
=Dodd, William E.= The emergence of the first social order in the
United States. Am. hist. rev., 40 (1935), 217-31.
[=Ellyson, James T.=] The London company of Virginia; a brief account
of its transactions in colonizing Virginia. N. Y., 1908. 24 p.
=Forman, Henry C.= The architecture of the Old South: the medieval
style, 1585-1850. Cambridge, Mass., 1948. 203 p.
____ Virginia architecture in seventeenth century. Williamsburg, 1957.
(Jamestown 350th anniversary historical booklet, No. 11.)
=Green, Bennett W.= How Newport's News got its name. Richmond, 1907.
142 p.
=Greer, George C.= Early Virginia immigrants [1623-1666] Richmond,
1912. 376 p.
=Hartwell, Henry.= The present state of Virginia, and the college, by
Henry Hartwell, James Blair, and Edward Chilton [1727]. Ed. by
Hunter D. Farish. Williamsburg, Va., 1940. lxxiii, 105 p.
=Henry, William W.= The settlement at Jamestown, with particular
reference to the late attacks upon Captain John Smith, Pocahontas,
and John Rolfe. Va. hist. soc., Proceedings, 1882, p. 10-63.
=Jefferson, Thomas.= Notes on the state of Virginia [1787]. Ed. by
William Peden. Chapel Hill, N. C., 1955. 315 p.
"Articles agreed on & concluded at James Cittie in Virginia
[1651]," p. 114-16. "An act of indempnitie made att the
surrender of the countrey [1651]," p. 116-17.
=Jester, Annie L. and Martha W. Hiden=, eds. Adventurers of purse and
person. Virginia, 1607-1625. [n.p.] 1956. 442 p.
=Kingsbury, Susan M.= A comparison of the Virginia company with the
other English trading companies of the 16th and 17th centuries.
Am. hist. assoc., Report, 1906, v. 1, p. 159-76.
=Lefroy, Sir John H.= Memorials of the discovery and early settlement
of the Bermudas or Somers islands, 1516-1685. London, 1877-1879. 2
v.
=Mason, George C.= The case against Henricopolis. Va. mag., 56 (1948),
350-53.
=Mook, Maurice A.= The ethnological significance of Tindall's map of
Virginia, 1608. W & M quar. (ser. 2), 23 (1943), 371-408.
____ Virginia ethnology from an early relation [an analysis of Archer's
"A relatyon of the discovery of our river"] W & M quar. (ser. 2),
23 (1943), 101-29.
=Morison, Samuel E.= The Plymouth colony and Virginia. Va. mag., 62
(1954), 147-65.
=Morton, Richard L.= Struggle against tyranny and the beginning of
a new era, 1677-1699. Williamsburg, 1957. (Jamestown 350th
anniversary historical booklet, No. 9.)
=Neill, Edward D.= Early settlement of Virginia and Virginiola, as
noticed by poets and players in the time of Shakspeare, with some
letters on the colonization of America, never before printed.
Minneapolis, Minn., 1878. 47 p.
____ The English colonization of America during the seventeenth
century. London, 1871. 352 p.
____ English maids for Virginia planters. Ships arriving at Jamestown,
from the settlement of Virginia until the revocation of charter of
London company. New England hist. and gen. register, 30 (1876),
410-12, 414-18.
____ History of the Virginia company of London. Albany, N. Y., 1869.
432 p.
____ Virginia, as a penal colony. Historical mag. (ser. 2), 5 (1869),
296-97.
____ Virginia Carolorum: the colony under the rule of Charles the First
and Second ... 1625-1685. Albany, N. Y., 1886. 446 p.
____ Virginia company of London. Extracts from their manuscript
transactions. Washington, 1868. 17 p.
____ Virginia governors under the London company. Saint Paul, Minn.,
1889. 35 p.
____ The Virginia lotteries. Virginia slaveholders, Feb., 1625. New
England hist. and gen. register, 31 (1877), 21-22.
____ Virginia vetusta, during the reign of James the First. Albany, N.
Y., 1885. 216 p.
=Phillips, Philip L.= Some early maps of Virginia and the makers,
including plates relating to the first settlement of Jamestown.
Va. mag., 15 (1907), 71-81.
=Sainsbury, W. Noel.= The first settlement of French protestants in
America [1634]. Antiquary, 3 (1881), 101-3.
=Sams, Conway W.= The conquest of Virginia: the second attempt ...
1606-1610. Norfolk, Va., 1929. 916 p.
____ The conquest of Virginia; the third attempt, 1610-1624. N. Y.,
1939. 824 p.
=Stanard, Mary N.= The story of Virginia's first century. Philadelphia,
1928. 331 p.
=Stanard, William G.= Some emigrants to Virginia. Memoranda in regard
to several hundred emigrants to Virginia during the colonial
period. Richmond, 1911. 79 p.
=Stephenson, N. W.= Some inner history of the Virginia company. W & M
quar. (ser. 1), 22 (1913), 89-98.
=Swem, Earl G.=, ed. Jamestown 350th anniversary historical booklets.
Williamsburg, 1957. 23 v.
Contents: 1) E. G. Swem, J. M. Jennings and J. A. Servies, A
selected bibliography of Virginia, 1607-1699. 2) W. W. Abbot,
A Virginia chronology, 1585-1783. 3) B. C. McCary, Captain
John Smith's map of Virginia. 4) S. M. Bemiss, The three
charters of the Virginia company of London. 5) W. F. Craven,
The Virginia company of London, 1606-1624. 6) C. E. Hatch,
The first seventeen years at Jamestown, 1607-1624. 7) W. E.
Washburn, Virginia under Charles I, and Cromwell, 1625-1660. 8)
T. J. Wertenbaker, Bacon's rebellion, 1676. 9) R. L. Morton,
Struggle against tyranny and the beginning of a new era,
1677-1699. 10) G. M. Brydon, The faith of our fathers; religion
in Virginia, 1607-1699. 11) H. C. Forman, Virginia architecture
in seventeenth century. 12) W. S. Robinson, Mother earth; land
grants in Virginia, 1607-1699. 13) James Wharton, The bounty
of the Chesapeake; fishing in colonial Virginia, 1607-1699.
14) Lyman Carrier, Agriculture in Virginia, 1607-1699. 15)
S. M. Ames, Reading, writing and arithmetic in Virginia,
1607-1699. 16) T. J. Wertenbaker, The government of Virginia
in the seventeenth century. 17) A. L. Jester, Domestic life in
Virginia, 1607-1699. 18) B. C. McCary, Indians in seventeenth
century Virginia. 19) M. W. Hiden, How justice grew; the
counties of Virginia; an abstract of their formation. 20) Melvin
Herndon, The sovereign remedy; tobacco in colonial Virginia. 21)
T. P. Hughes, Medicine in Virginia, 1607-1699. 22) C. W. Evans,
Some notes on shipping and shipbuilding in colonial Virginia.
23) J. P. Hudson, Jamestown commodities in the seventeenth
century.
[T., J. W.] =The records of= the London company for the first colony in
Virginia. Historical magazine, 2 (1858), 33-35.
=Torrence, William C.=, comp. Virginia wills and administrations,
1632-1800. Richmond [1931] 483 p.
=Traylor, Robert L.= Some notes on the first recorded visit of white
men to the site of the present city of Richmond, Virginia.
Richmond, 1899. 20 p.
=Tyler, Lyon G.= England in America, 1580-1652. N. Y., 1904. 355 p.
____ London company records. Am. hist. assoc., Report (1901), v. 1, p.
543-550.
=Washburn, Wilcomb E.= Virginia under Charles I, and Cromwell,
1625-1660. Williamsburg, 1957. (Jamestown 350th anniversary
historical booklet, No. 7.)
=Waterman, Thomas T.= Domestic colonial architecture of Tidewater
Virginia. N. Y., 1932. 191 p.
=Wertenbaker, Thomas J.= The government of Virginia in the seventeenth
century. Williamsburg, 1957. (Jamestown 350th anniversary
historical booklet, No. 16.)
____ Virginia under the Stuarts, 1607-1688. Princeton, N. J., 1914. 271
p.
=Wise, Jennings C.= Ye kingdome of Accowmacke; or, The Eastern Shore of
Virginia in the seventeenth century. Richmond, 1911. 406 p.
=Wright, Louis B.= The first gentlemen of Virginia. San Marino, Calif.,
1940. 373 p.
=Yardley, John H. R.= Before the Mayflower. N. Y., 1931. 408 p.
=Seventeenth-Century Virginia=
--=Special Topics=--
=Jamestown=
=Caywood, Louis R.= Excavations at Green Spring plantation. Yorktown,
Va., 1955. 29 p.
=Cotter, John L. and J. P. Hudson.= New discoveries at Jamestown.
Washington, 1957. 99 p.
=Forman, Henry C.= The bygone "Subberbs of James Cittie." W & M quar.
(ser. 2), 20 (1940), 475-86.
____ Jamestown and St. Mary's, buried cities of romance. Baltimore,
1938. 355 p.
=Gookin, Warner F.= The first leaders at Jamestown [1606-1607]. Va.
mag., 58 (1950), 181-93.
=Gregory, George C.= Jamestown first brick state house. Va. mag., 43
(1935), 193-99.
=Hatch, Charles E.= The first seventeen years at Jamestown, 1607-1624.
Williamsburg, 1957. (Jamestown 350th anniversary historical
booklet, No. 6.)
____ Jamestown, Virginia; the town site and its story. [Washington,
1957] 54 p.
=Riley, Edward M.= and =Charles E. Hatch=, eds. James Towne in the
words of contemporaries. Washington, 1955. 36 p.
=Tyler, Lyon G.= The cradle of the republic: Jamestown and James River.
[2nd ed.] Richmond, 1906. 286 p.
=Yonge, Samuel H.= The site of old "James Towne," 1607-1698. Richmond,
1907. 151 p.
=Social Life, Education=
=Ames, Susie M.= Reading, writing and arithmetic in Virginia,
1607-1699. Williamsburg, 1957. (Jamestown 350th anniversary
historical booklet, No. 15.)
[=Armstrong, Mrs. F. M.=] The Syms-Eaton free school. Benjamin Syms,
1634; Thomas Eaton, 1659. [n.p., n.d.] 26 p.
=Blanton, Wyndham B.= Medicine in Virginia in the seventeenth century.
Richmond [1930] 337 p.
=Bruce, Philip A.= Institutional history of Virginia in the seventeenth
century; an inquiry into the religious, moral, educational, legal,
military, and political condition of the people. N. Y., 1910. 2 v.
____ Social life of Virginia in the seventeenth century. An inquiry
into the origin of the higher planting class, together with an
account of the habits, customs, and diversions of the people. 2nd.
ed. Lynchburg, Va., 1927. 275 p.
=Buck, James L. B.= The development of public schools in Virginia,
1607-1952. Richmond [1952] 572 p. (Va. State board of educ.,
Bulletin, v. 35, no. 1)
=Campbell, Helen J.= The Syms and Eaton Schools and their successors. W
& M quar. (series 2), 20 (1940), 1-61.
=Comenius in England=; the visit of Jan Amos Komensky (Comenius), the
Czech philosopher and educationalist, to London, in 1641-1642; its
bearing on the origins of the Royal society, on the development
of the encyclopedia, and on plans for the higher education of
the Indians of New England and Virginia. Ed. by Robert F. Young.
London, 1932. 99 p.
=Crozier, William A.= Virginia colonial militia, 1651-1776. N. Y.,
1905. 144 p.
=Hughes, Thomas P.= Medicine in Virginia, 1607-1699. Williamsburg,
1957. (Jamestown 350th anniversary historical booklet, No. 21.)
=Jester, Annie L.= Domestic life in Virginia, 1607-1699. Williamsburg,
1957. (Jamestown 350th anniversary historical booklet, No. 17.)
=Land, Robert H.= Henrico and its college. W & M quar. (ser. 2), 18
(1938), 453-98.
=McCabe, W. Gordon.= The first university in America, 1619-1622. Va.
mag., 30 (1922), 133-56.
=McMurtrie, Douglas C.= The first printing in Virginia; the abortive
attempt at Jamestown, the first permanent press at Williamsburg,
the early gazettes, and the work of other Virginia typographic
pioneers. Vienna, 1935. 15 p.
=Neill, Edward D.= History of education in Virginia during the
seventeenth century. Washington, 1867. 27 p.
____ A study of the Virginia census of 1624. New England hist. and gen.
register, 31 (1877), 147-53, 265-72, 393-401.
=Powell, William S.= Books in the Virginia colony before 1624. W & M
quar. (ser. 3), 5 (1948), 177-84.
=Shurtleff, Harold R.= The log cabin myth; a study of the early
dwellings of the English colonists in North America. Cambridge,
Mass., 1939. 243 p.
=Smart, G. K.= Private libraries in colonial Virginia. Am. literature,
10 (1938), 24-52.
=Tyler, Lyon G.= The College of William and Mary in Virginia: its
history and work, 1693-1907. Richmond, 1907. 96 p.
=Wertenbaker, Thomas J.= Patrician and plebeian in Virginia.
Charlottesville, Va., 1910. 239 p.
____ The planters of colonial Virginia. Princeton, N. J., 1922. 260 p.
=Economics=
=Andrews, Charles M.= British committees, commissions, and councils of
trade and plantations, 1622-1675. Baltimore, 1908. 151 p. (Johns
Hopkins univ. studies in hist. and pol. sci., ser. 26, nos. 1-3)
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Baltimore, 1895. 99 p. (Johns Hopkins univ. studies in hist. and
pol. sci., ser. 13, nos. 6-7)
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seventeenth century. In: Essays in colonial history presented to
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=Bassett, John S.= The relation between the Virginia planter and the
London merchant. Am. hist. assoc., Report (1901), v. 1, p. 551-75.
=Bruce, Kathleen.= Virginia iron manufacture in the slave era. N. Y.,
1930. 482 p.
=Bruce, Philip A.= Economic history of Virginia in the seventeenth
century. N. Y., 1895. 2 v.
=Evans, Cerinda W.= Some notes on shipping and shipbuilding in colonial
Virginia. Williamsburg, 1957. (Jamestown 350th anniversary
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=Handlin, Oscar, and Mary Handlin.= Origins of the southern labor
system [1607-1705] W & M quar. (ser. 3), 7 (1950), 199-222.
=Harrington, Jean C.= Glassmaking at Jamestown, America's first
industry. Richmond [1952] 47 p.
=Harrison, Fairfax.= Virginia land grants: a study of conveyancing in
relation to colonial politics. Richmond, 1925. 184 p.
=Hatch, Charles E.= Glassmaking in Virginia, 1607-1625. W & M quar.
(ser. 2), 21 (1941), 119-38, 227-38.
=Hudson, J. P.= Jamestown commodities in the seventeenth century.
Williamsburg, 1957. (Jamestown 350th anniversary historical
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=Judah, Charles B.= The North American fisheries and British policy to
1713. Urbana, Ill., 1933. 183 p.
=Macpherson, David.= Annals of commerce, manufactures, fisheries, and
navigation. London, 1805. 4 v.
=Read, Thomas T.= Gold and the Virginia colony. Columbia university
quarterly, 26 (1934), 43-47.
=Ripley, William Z.= The financial history of Virginia, 1609-1776. N.
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=Smith, Abbot E.= Colonists in bondage: white servitude and convict
labor in America. 1607-1776. Chapel Hill, N. C., 1947. 435 p.
=Wharton, James.= The bounty of the Chesapeake; fishing in colonial
Virginia, 1607-1699. Williamsburg, 1957. (Jamestown 350th
anniversary historical booklet, No. 13.)
=Williams, Lloyd H.= Pirates of colonial Virginia. Richmond, 1937. 139
p.
=Law and Politics=
=Allen, John W.= English political thought, 1603-1660 (v. 1,
1603-1644). London, 1938. 525 p.
=Ames, Susie M.= The reunion of two Virginia counties. Journal of
Southern history, 8 (1942), 536-48.
=Birch, Thomas.= The court and times of James the First. London, 1849.
2 v.
=Brown, Alexander.= English politics in early Virginia history. Boston,
1901. 277 p.
=Chandler, Julian A. C.= The history of suffrage in Virginia.
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=Chitwood, Oliver P.= Justice in colonial Virginia. Baltimore, 1905.
123 p. (Johns Hopkins univ. studies in hist. and pol. sci., ser.
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=Chumbley, George L.= Colonial justice in Virginia; the development of
a judicial system, typical laws and cases of the period. Richmond,
1938. 174 p.
=Crump, Helen J.= Colonial admiralty jurisdiction in the seventeenth
century. London, 1931. 200 p.
=Flippin, Percy S.= Financial administration of the colony of Virginia.
Baltimore, 1915. 95 p. (Johns Hopkins univ. studies in hist. and
pol. sci., ser. 33, no. 2)
____ The royal government in Virginia, 1624-1775. N. Y., 1919. 393 p.
(Columbia univ. stud. in hist., econ., and pub. law, v. 84, no. 1)
=Fuller, Hugh N.= [and others] Criminal justice in Virginia. N. Y.,
1931. 195 p.
=Gordon, Armistead C.= The laws of Bacon's assembly. [Charlottesville,
Va., 1914] 12 p.
=Hannay, David.= The great chartered companies. London, 1926. 258 p.
=Harper, Lawrence A.= The English navigation laws: a
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503 p.
=Hatch, Charles E.= The oldest legislative assembly in America & its
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hist. assoc., Report, 1893, p. 297-316.
=Hiden, Martha W.= How justice grew; the counties of Virginia: an
abstract of their formation. Williamsburg, 1957. (Jamestown 350th
anniversary historical booklet, No. 19.)
=Karraker, Cyrus H.= The seventeenth-century sheriff; a comparative
study of the sheriff in England and the Chesapeake colonies,
1607-1689. Chapel Hill, N. C., 1930. 219 p.
=Latané, John H.= The early relations between Maryland and Virginia.
Baltimore, 1895. 81 p. (Johns Hopkins univ. stud. in hist. and
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=Neill, Edward D.= The earliest contest in America on charter-rights,
begun A.D. 1619, in Virginia legislature. Macalester college,
Contributions (ser. 1), 5 (1890), 141-68.
=Porter, Albert O.= County government in Virginia, a legislative
history, 1607-1904. N. Y., 1947. 356 p.
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=Scott, Arthur P.= Criminal law in colonial Virginia. Chicago, 1930.
335 p.
=Agriculture=
=Arents, George.= The seed from which Virginia grew. W & M quar. (ser.
2), 19 (1939), 123-29.
____ Tobacco; its history illustrated by the books, manuscripts and
engravings in the library of George Arents, Jr.; bibliographic
notes by Jerome E. Brooks. N. Y., 1937-1952. 5 v.
=Cabell, Nathaniel F.= Early history of agriculture in Virginia.
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=Carrier, Lyman.= Agriculture in Virginia, 1607-1699. Williamsburg,
1957. (Jamestown 350th anniversary historical booklet, No. 14.)
=Craven, Avery O.= Soil exhaustion as a factor in the agricultural
history of Virginia and Maryland, 1606-1860. Urbana, Ill., 1926.
179 p.
=Gray, Lewis C.= History of agriculture in the southern United States
to 1860. Washington, 1933. 2 v. (Carnegie institution publication,
no. 430)
=Herndon, Melvin.= The sovereign remedy; tobacco in colonial Virginia.
Williamsburg, 1957. (Jamestown 350th anniversary historical
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=Robert, Joseph C.= The story of tobacco in America. N. Y., 1949. 296 p.
=Tatham, William.= An historical and practical essay on the culture and
commerce of tobacco. London, 1800. 330 p.
=Indians=
=Bushnell, David I.= The five Monacan towns in Virginia, 1607.
Washington, 1930. 38 p.
____ Indian sites below the falls of the Rappahannock, Virginia.
Washington, 1937. 65 p. (Smithsonian misc. collections, v. 96, no.
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____ The Monahoac tribes in Virginia, 1608. Washington, 1935. 56 p.
(Smithsonian misc. collections, v. 94, no. 8)
____ Virginia--from early records. Am. anthropologist (new ser.), 9
(1907), 31-44.
=McCary, Ben C.= Indians in seventeenth-century Virginia. Williamsburg,
1957. (Jamestown 350th anniversary historical booklet, No. 18.)
=Mooney, James.= The Powhatan confederacy, past and present. Am.
anthropologist (new ser.), 9 (1907), 129-152.
=Morrison, Alfred J.= The Virginia Indian trade to 1673. W & M quar.
(ser. 2), 1 (1921), 217-36.
=Neill, Edward D.= Massacre at Falling Creek, Virginia, March 22,
1621/22. Magazine of Am. hist., 1 (1877), 222-25.
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Virginia. Journal of Southern history, 18 (1952), 152-68.
=Willoughby, Charles C.= The Virginia Indians in the seventeenth
century. Am. anthropologist, 9 (1907), 57-86.
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=Brent, Frank P.= Some unpublished facts relating to Bacon's rebellion
on the Eastern Shore of Virginia, gleaned from the court records
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=Lane, John H.= The birth of liberty; a story of Bacon's rebellion.
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=Stanard, Mary N.= The story of Bacon's rebellion. N. Y., 1907. 181 p.
=Stearns, Bertha M.= The literary treatment of Bacon's rebellion in
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=Ware, William.= A memoir of Nathaniel Bacon. In: Jared Sparks, Library
of American biography, Boston, 1844, ser. 2, v. 3, p. 239-306.
=Wertenbaker, Thomas J.= Bacon's rebellion, 1676. Williamsburg, 1957.
(Jamestown 350th anniversary historical booklet, No. 8.)
____ Torchbearer of the revolution, the story of Bacon's rebellion and
its leader. Princeton, N. J., 1940. 237 p.
=Religion=
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colonies and foreign dependencies of the British empire. 2nd ed.
London, 1856. 3 v.
=Brydon, George M.= The faith of our fathers; religion in Virginia,
1607-1699. Williamsburg, 1957. (Jamestown 350th anniversary
historical booklet, No. 10.)
____ Virginia's mother church and the political conditions under which
it grew. Richmond, 1947-52. 2 v.
=Colonial churches=; a series of sketches of churches in the original
colony of Virginia. Richmond, 1907. 319 p.
=Cross, Arthur L.= The Anglican Episcopate and the American colonies.
N. Y., 1902. 368 p.
=Edmundson, William.= A journal of the life, travels, sufferings and
labour of love in the work of the ministry. 2nd ed. London, 1774.
371 p.
Description of Virginia in 1672, p. 66-72.
=Goodwin, Edward L.= The colonial church in Virginia. Milwaukee, Wis.
[1927] 342 p.
=Goodwin, William A. R.= The records of Bruton parish church; ed. by
Mary Frances Goodwin. Richmond, 1941. 205 p.
=Hawkins, Ernest.= Historical notices of the missions of the Church
of England in the North American colonies, previous to the
independence of the United States. London, 1845. 447 p.
[=Hawks, Francis L.=] A narrative of events connected with the rise and
progress of the Protestant Episcopal church in Virginia. To which
is added ... the Journals of the conventions in Virginia from the
commencement to the present time. N. Y., 1836. 286, 332 p.
=Little, Lewis P.= Imprisoned preachers and religious liberty in
Virginia. Lynchburg, Va., 1938. 534 p.
=McIlwaine, Henry R.= The struggle of protestant dissenters for
religious toleration in Virginia. Baltimore, 1894. 67 p. (Johns
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=Mason, George C.= Colonial churches of Tidewater Virginia. Richmond,
1945. 381 p.
=Miller, Perry.= Religion and society in the early literature: the
religious impulse in the founding of Virginia [1619-1624]. W & M
quar. (ser. 3), 6 (1949), 24-41.
____ The religious impulse in the founding of Virginia: religion and
society in the early literature [1606-1622]. W & M quar. (ser. 3),
5 (1948), 492-522.
=Pennington, Edgar L.= The Church of England in colonial Virginia; pt.
1, 1607-1619. Hartford, Conn., 1937. 22 p.
=Perry, William S.= Historical collections relating to the American
colonial church. v. 1, Virginia. [Hartford, Conn.] 1870. 585 p.
____ The history of the American Episcopal church, 1587-1883. Boston,
1885. 2 v.
=Seiler, William H.= The Church of England as the established church
in seventeenth-century Virginia [1606-1705] Journal of southern
history, 15 (1949), 478-508.
=Thomas, R. S.= The old brick church, near Smithfield, Virginia. Built
in 1632. Va. hist. soc., Collections (new ser.), 11 (1892), 127-63.
____ The religious element in the settlement at Jamestown in 1607.
Petersburg, Va., 1898. 36 p.
=The Negro=
=Ballagh, James C.= A history of slavery in Virginia. Baltimore, 1902.
160 p. (Johns Hopkins univ. studies in hist. and pol. sci., extra
vol., 24)
=Phillips, Ulrich B.= American Negro slavery. N. Y., 1918. 529 p.
=Russell, John H.= The free Negro in Virginia, 1619-1865. Baltimore,
1913. 194 p. (Johns Hopkins univ. studies in hist. and pol.
science, ser. 31, no. 3)
=Writers' program.= Virginia. The Negro in Virginia. N. Y., 1940. 380 p.
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1-30.
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Gorges and his province of Maine, Boston, 1890, v. 1, p. 1-198.
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=Boddie, John B.= Edward Bennett of London and Virginia. W & M quar.
(ser. 2), 13 (1933), 117-30.
=Burnyeat, John.= John Burnyeat, 1665-1673 [a missionary in the
American colonies]. Va. mag., 19 (1911), 58-60.
=Chatterton, Edward K.= Captain John Smith. N. Y., 1927. 286 p.
=Claiborne, John H.= William Claiborne of Virginia. N. Y., 1917. 231 p.
=Davis, Richard B.= George Sandys, poet-adventurer; a study in
Anglo-American culture in the seventeenth century. N.Y., 1955. 320
p.
=Edwards, Edward.= The life of Sir Walter Raleigh. Based on
contemporary documents ... together with his letters now first
collected. [London] 1868. 2 v.
=Fletcher, John G.= John Smith--also Pocahontas. N. Y., [1928] 303 p.
=Glenn, Keith.= Captain John Smith and the Indians. Va. mag., 52
(1944), 228-48.
=Hale, Nathaniel C.= Virginia venturer, a historical biography of
William Claiborne, 1600-1677; the story of the merchant venturers
who founded Virginia, and the war in the Chesapeake. Richmond
[1951] 340 p.
=Harlow, Vincent T.= ed. The voyages of Captain William Jackson
(1642-1645). London, 1923. 39 p.
=Harrison, Fairfax.= Henry Norwood (1615-1689), treasurer of Virginia,
1661-1673. Va. mag., 33 (1925), 1-10.
=Heck, Earl L. W.= Augustine Herrman, beginner of the Virginia tobacco
trade. [Richmond] 1941. 123 p.
=Henry, William W.= The rescue of Captain John Smith by Pocahontas.
Potters American monthly, 4 (1875), 523-28; 5 (1875), 591-97.
=Herndon, John G.= The Reverend William Wilkinson of England, Virginia,
and Maryland [1612?-1663]. Va. mag., 57 (1949), 316-321.
=Lee, Cazenove G. Jr.=, Lee Chronicle, a history of the Lees of
Virginia. N. Y., 1956. 315 p.
=Lee, Edmund J.= Lee of Virginia, 1642-1892. Philadelphia [1895] 586 p.
=Morse, Jarvis M.= John Smith and his critics. Journal of Southern
history, 1 (1935), 124-37.
=Motley, Daniel E.= Life of Commissary James Blair, founder of William
and Mary college. Baltimore, 1901. 57 p. (Johns Hopkins univ.
studies in hist. and pol. science, ser. 19, no. 10)
=Neill, Edward D.= Captain John Smith, adventurer and romancer.
Macalester college, Contributions (ser. 1), 11 (1890), 241-51.
____ Memoir of Rev. Patrick Copland, rector elect of the first
projected college in the United States. N. Y., 1871. 96 p.
____ Pocahontas and her companions; a chapter from the history of the
Virginia company of London. Albany, N. Y., 1869. 32 p.
=Peckard, Peter.= Memoirs of the life of Mr. Nicholas Ferrar.
Cambridge, 1790. 316 p.
=Pennington, Edgar L.= Commissary Blair. Hartford, Conn., 1936. 24 p.
=Poindexter, Charles.= Captain John Smith and his critics. Richmond,
1893. 74 p.
=Pring, James H.= Captaine Martin Pringe, the last of the Elizabethan
seamen. Plymouth [Eng.], 1888. 34 p.
=Robertson, Wyndham.= Pocahontas, alias Matoaka, and her descendants
... historical notes by R. A. Brock. Richmond, 1887. 84 p.
=Sheppard, William L.= The Princess Pocahontas; her story. From the
original authorities. Richmond, 1907. 17 p.
=Shirley, John W.= George Percy at Jamestown, 1607-1612. Va. mag., 57
(1949), 227-43.
=Smith, Bradford.= John Smith, his life and legend. Philadelphia, 1953.
375 p.
=Smyth, Clifford.= Captain John Smith and England's first successful
colony in America. N. Y., 1931. 176 p.
=Southall, James P. C.= Captain John Martin of Brandon on the James.
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=Syme, Ronald.= John Smith of Virginia. N. Y., 1954. 192 p.
=Webster, Mrs. M. M.= Pocahontas. A legend, with historical and
traditionary notes. Philadelphia, 1840. 220 p.
=Fiction and Drama=
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A tragi-comedy. London, 1690. 56 p.
=Benet, Stephen Vincent.= Western star. N. Y. [1943]. 181 p.
[Illustration:
VIRGINIA.
A
SERMON
PREACHED AT
=White-Chappel, in the=
presence of many, Honourable and
Worshipfull, the Adventurers and Plan-
ters for =Virginia=.
25 April, 1609.
PVBLISHED FOR THE BENEFIT
=And Vse Of The Colony, Planted,=
and to bee Planted there, and for the Ad-
uancement of their =Chris-
tian= Purpose.
By =William Symonds=, Preacher at Saint
=Saviours= in Southwarke.
=Ivde. 22. 23.=
Haue compassion of some, in putting of difference:
And other save with feare, pulling them out of the fire.
LONDON:
Printed by =I. Windet= for =Eleazar Edgar=, and
_William Welby_, and are to be sold in Paules Church-
yard at the Signe of the Windmill.
1609.
]
[Illustration:
=Nova Britannia=.
OFFRING MOST
Excellent fruites by Planting in
=Virginia=
Exciting all such as be well affected
to further the same.
[Illustration: Ship]
=London=
Printed for =Samvel Macham=, and are to be sold at
his Shop in Pauls Church-yard, at the
Signe of the Bul-head.
1609.
]
[Illustration:
NEVVES FROM VIRGINIA.
=The Lost Flocke Triumphant=;
With the happy Arrival of that famous and
worthy knight S^r Thomas Gates: and
the well reputed and valient Cap-
taine M^r Christopher New-
porte, and others, into
Virginia.
With the manner of their distresse in the Iland of Devils
(otherwise called Bermoothawes) where they
remained 42 weeks, and builded
two Pynaces, in which
they returned unto
Virginia.
by =R. Rich, Gent.=, one of the voyage.
LONDON:
Printed by Edw. Allde, and are to be solde by John
Wright, at Christ-Church dore. 1610.
]
[Illustration:
A TRVE
DISCOVRSE OF THE
PRESENT ESTATE OF =Vir-
ginia=, and the successe of the affaires
there till the 18 of _Iune_, 1614.
_TOGETHER_.
WITH A RELATION OF THE
seuerall English Townes and fortes, the assu-
red hopes of that countrie and the peace
_concluded with the Indians_.
The Christening of _Powhatans_ daughter
_and her marriage with an English-man_.
Written by =Raphe Hamor= the yon-
ger, late Secretarie in that Colony.
_Alget, qui non ardet._
[Illustration]
Printed at London by =Iohn Beale= for =Wil-
liam Welby= dwelling at the signe of the
_Swanne in Pauls Church-yard_ 1615.
]
[Illustration:
THE
GENERALL HISTORIE
OF
Virginia, New-England, and the Summer
Isles: with the names of the Adventurers,
Planters, and Governours from their
first beginning An: 1584 to this
present 1626.
+With the Procedings of those Severall Colonies
and the Accidents that befell them in all their
Journyes and Discoveries.+
Also the Maps and Descriptions of all those
Countryes, their Commodities, people,
Government, Customes, and Religion
yet knowne.
_=Divided into sixe Bookes.=_
+By Captaine IOHN SMITH, sometymes Governour
in those Countryes & Admirall
of+ New England.
LONDON.
Printed by I.D. and
I.H. for +Michael
Sparkes+.
1627.
Thomas L. Williams, Photo
]
[Illustration:
VIRGINIA
Impartially examined, and left
to publick view, to be considered by all Iudi-
cious and honest men.
Under which Title, is compre-
hended the Degrees from 34 to 39, wherein
lyes the rich and healthfull Countries of _Roanook_,
the now Plantations of _Virginia_
and _Mary-land_.
Looke not upon this =Booke=, as
those that are set out by private men, for private
ends; for being read, you'l find, the publick
good is the Authors onely aime.
For this Piece is no other then the Adventurers
or Planters faithfull Steward, disposing the Ad-
venture for the best advantage, advising
people of all degrees, from the highest
Master, to the meanest Servant,
how suddenly to raise
their fortunes.
Peruse the Table, and you shall finde the
way plainely layd downe
By =William Bvllock=, Gent.
_19 April, 1649._ _Imprimatur_, Hen: Whaley.
_LONDON_:
Printed by _John Hammond_, and are to be sold at his house
over-against S. _Andrews_ Church in _Holborne_. 1649.
]
[Illustration:
VIRGINIA:
More especially the South part thereof,
Richly and truly valued: _viz._
The fertile _Carolana_, and no lesse excellent Isle of _Roa-
noak_, of Latitude from 31. to 37. Degr. relating the
meanes of raysing infinite profits to the Adventu-
rers and Planters.
_The second Edition, with Addition of_
THE DISCOVERY OF SILKWORMS.
with their benefit.
And Implanting of Mulberry Trees.
ALSO
The Dressing of Vines, for the rich Trade of ma-
king Wines in VIRGINIA.
_Together with_
The making of the Saw-mill, very usefull in _Virginia_,
for cutting of Timber and Clapbord to build with-
all, and its Conversion to many as profitable Uses.
By _E. W._ Gent.
_LONDON_,
Printed by _T. H._ for _John Stephenson_, at the Signe of
the Sun below Ludgate. 1650.
]
[Illustration:
PUBLICK
GOOD
Without Private
INTEREST.
OR,
A Compendious _Remonstrance_ of the
present sad State and Condition of the English
Colonie in VIRGINEA.
WITH
A Modest =Declaration= of the severall Causes
(so far as by the Rules of Right, Reason, and Religious Obser-
vation may be Collected) why it hath not prospered better hitherto
AS ALSO,
A Submissive suggestion of the most prudentiall probable wayes, and
meanes, both Divine and Civill (that the inexpert Remembrancer could
for the present recall to minde) for its happyer improvement
and advancement for the future.
Humbly presented to His Highness the Lord _Protectour_,
By a Person zealously devoted,
To the more effectual propagating of the Gospel in that Nation,
and to the inlargement of the Honour and Benefit, both of the said
Colonie, and this whole Nation, from whence they
have been transplanted.
_Qui sibi solium se natum putat,
Secum solus semper vivat,
Hoc solum habent homines cum deo commune,
Aliu bene facere Synes._
To do good, and to communicate, forget not:
for with such sacrifices, God is well pleased, _Heb._ 13. v. 16.
_LONDON_,
Printed for _Henry Marsh_, and are to be sold at
the Crown in S. _Paul_'s Church-yard. 1657.
]
=Cooke, John E.= My lady Pokahontas. A true relation of Virginia. Writ
by Anas Todkill, puritan and pilgrim. Boston, 1885. 190 p.
[=Davis, John=] Captain Smith and Princess Pocahontas, an Indian tale.
Philadelphia, 1817. 90 p.
____ The first settlers of Virginia, an historical novel. 2nd ed. N.
Y., 1806. 284 p.
=Freeman, Mary E. W.= The heart's highway; a romance of Virginia in the
seventeenth-century. N. Y., 1900. 308 p.
=Goodwin, Mrs. Maud (Wilder).= The head of a hundred, being an account
of certain passages in the life of Humphrey Huntoon, sometime an
officer in the colony of Virginia. Boston, 1895. 225 p.
____ White aprons; a romance of Bacon's rebellion, Virginia, 1676.
Boston, 1896. 339 p.
=Johnston, Mary.= Prisoners of hope; a tale of colonial Virginia.
Boston, 1898. 378 p.
____ To have and to hold. Boston, 1900. 403 p.
=Tucker, Henry St. G.= Hansford; a tale of Bacon's rebellion. Richmond,
1857. 356 p.
PRIMARY WORKS
=Collections=
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John Harvey, A brief declaration of the state of Virginia, 1624,
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=Bemiss, Samuel M.= The three charters of the Virginia company of
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=Brown University.= John Carter Brown library. Three proclamations
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=Catterall, Helen T.=, ed. Judicial cases concerning American slavery
and the Negro. Washington, 1926-37. 5 v. (Carnegie inst.,
Publication no. 374)
v. 1: "Cases from the courts of England, Virginia, West
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=Colonial records= of Virginia. Richmond, 1874. 106 p.
Contents: 1) The first assembly of Virginia, held July 30,
1619. 2) List of the livinge and the dead in Virginia, Feb. 16,
1623. 3) A briefe declaration of the plantation of Virginia,
during the first twelve years. 4) A list of the number of men,
women and children, inhabitants in the several counties within
the collony of Virginia, in 1634. 5) A letter from Charles II,
acknowledging the receipt of a present of Virginia silk, 1668.
6.) A list of the parishes in Virginia, 1680.
=Copland, Patrick.= Letters of Patrick Copland [1623, 1646]. W & M
quar. (ser. 2), 9 (1929), 300-302.
=Donnan, Elizabeth=, ed. Documents illustrative of the history of the
slave trade to America. Washington, 1930-1935. 4 v.
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=Fleet, Beverley and L. O. Duvall=, comps. Virginia colonial abstracts,
v. 1-34; ser. 2, v. 1-Richmond, 1937(?)-date.
Titles touching the seventeenth century follow:
____ Acchawmacke, 1632-1637. Richmond [1943] 111 p. (Virginia colonial
abstracts, v. 18)
____ Accomacke county, 1637-1640. Richmond [1948] 103 p. (Virginia
colonial abstracts, v. 32)
____ Charles City county court orders, 1655-58. Richmond [1941-42] 4 v.
(Virginia colonial abstracts, v. 10-13)
____ Huntington library data, 1607-1850. Richmond [1947] 109 p.
(Virginia colonial abstracts, v. 30)
____ Lancaster county [court records] 1652-1655. Richmond [1944] 110 p.
(Virginia colonial abstracts, v. 22)
____ Lancaster county, record book 2. 1654-1666, pages 1-394. Richmond
[n.d.] 137 p. (Virginia colonial abstracts, v. 1)
____ Lower Norfolk county, 1651-1654. Richmond [1948] 106 p. (Virginia
colonial abstracts, v. 31)
____ Northumberland co. Record of births, 1661-1810. Richmond [1938]
134 p. (Virginia colonial abstracts, v. 3)
____ Northumberland county records. 1652-1655. Richmond [1937?] 141 p.
(Virginia colonial abstracts, v. 2)
____ Northumbria collectanea, 1645-1720. Richmond [1943-44] 2 v.
(Virginia colonial abstracts, v. 19-20)
____ Richmond county records, 1692-1724. Richmond [1942-43] 2 v.
(Virginia colonial abstracts, v. 16-17)
____ Virginia company of London, 1607-1624; ed. by Lindsay O. Duvall.
[n.p., 1955] 121 p. (Virginia colonial abstracts, ser. 2, v. 3)
____ Westmoreland county, 1653-1657. Richmond [1945] 102 p. (Virginia
colonial abstracts, v. 23)
____ York county, 1633-1657. Richmond [1945-46] 3 v. (Virginia colonial
abstracts, v. 24-26)
=Force, Peter=, comp. Tracts and other papers, relating principally
to the origin, settlement, and progress of the colonies in North
America, from the discovery of the country to the year 1776.
Washington, 1836-46. 4 v.
Vol. 1, no. 6, [Robert Johnson] Nova Britannia, 1609; no. 7
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Mathew] The beginning, progress, and conclusion of Bacon's
rebellion; no. 9, Mrs. Anne Cotton, An account of our late
troubles in Virginia; no. 10, Sir William Berkeley, A list of
those that have been executed for the late rebellion; no. 11, A
narrative of the Indian and civil wars in Virginia.
Vol. 2, no. 6, Extract from a manuscript collection of annals
relative to Virginia, 1642; no. 7, A description of the province
of New Albion, 1648; no. 8, A perfect description of Virginia,
1649; no. 9, Virginia and Maryland, or, The Lord Baltamore's
printed case, 1655.
Vol. 3, no. 1, [Virginia company of London] A true declaration
of the estate of the colonie in Virginia, 1610; no. 2, [William
Strachey, ed.] For the colony in Virginea Britannia. Lawes
divine, morall and martiall, &c., 1612; no. 5, Virginia company
of London, A declaration of the state of the colonie, 1620;
no. 6, Virginia company of London, Orders and constitutions,
1619-1620; no. 7, Nathaniel Shrigley, A true relation of
Virginia and Maryland, 1669; no. 10, [Henry Norwood] A voyage
to Virginia, 1649; no. 11, [Edward Williams] Virginia, more
especially the south part thereof, richly and truly valued,
1650; no. 12, John Clayton, Letter ... to the Royal society,
1688; no. 13 [Samuel Hartlib] The reformed Virginian silk-worm,
1655; no. 14, John Hammond, Leah and Rachel, or, The two
fruitfull sisters Virginia, and Maryland; no. 15, [Robert
Greene] Virginia's cure, or, An advisive narrative concerning
Virginia, 1662.
Vol. 1, no. 1-13; v. 2, no. 1-4, 6-7 reprinted: American
colonial tracts monthly, v. 1, no. 1-12, v. 2, no. 1-6,
Rochester, N. Y., 1897-98.
=Great Britain.= Privy Council. Acts of the Privy council of England,
colonial series, v. 1, A.D. 1613-1680. London, 1908. 930 p.
____ Public Record Office. Calendar of state papers, colonial series,
America and West Indies [1574-1699] London, 1860-1908. 10 v.
=Hakluyt, Richard.= The principal navigations, voyages, traffiques,
and discoveries of the English nation. Ed. by Edmund Goldsmid.
Edinburgh, 1885-1890. 16 v.
=Hale, Edward E.=, ed. Original documents ... illustrating the history
of Sir Walter Raleigh's first American colony, and the colony at
Jamestown. Am. antiq. soc., Transactions, 4 (1860), 1-65.
[Archer] A relatyon of the discovery of our river [1607], p.
40-65.
=Hall, Clayton C.=, ed. Narratives of early Maryland, 1633-1684. N. Y.,
1910. 460 p.
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answered, 1655," p. 187-230; "Leah and Rachel," by John Hammond,
1656, p. 281-308.
=Hayward, Nicholas=, Nicholas George, and Joseph Taylor. Old letters
from Virginia county records [1652-1705]. W & M quar. (ser. 1), 11
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=Hazard, Ebenezer.= Historical collections; consisting of state papers,
and other authentic documents. Philadelphia, 1792-94. 2 v.
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=Hening, William W.=, ed. The statutes at large; being a collection of
all the laws of Virginia ... 1619 [through the session of 1792].
Richmond, 1809-1823. 13 v.
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=Jensen, Merrill=, ed. English historical documents; American colonial
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=Labaree, Leonard W.=, ed. Royal instructions to British colonial
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[=List of tracts= relating to Virginia in the library of Dorchester
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=The Lower Norfolk= county, Virginia antiquary; ed. by Edward W. James.
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=Miscellaneous colonial= documents [1672-73], from the originals in the
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=Tyler's quarterly= historical and genealogical magazine. Richmond,
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v. 1-10, indexed in E. G. Swem, Virginia historical index.
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____ Executive journals of the Council of colonial Virginia. Vol. 1
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____ Minutes of the council and general court of colonial Virginia,
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____ Journals, 1659/60-1693. Richmond, 1914. 529 p.
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=Virginia magazine of= history and biography, v. 1-to date. Richmond,
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v. 1-38, indexed in E. G. Swem, Virginia historical index.
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=William and Mary= college quarterly historical magazine; ed. by Lyon
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Second series, ed. by E. G. Swem, Williamsburg, Va., 1921-43. 23
v. Third series, ed. by R. L. Morton, and others, Williamsburg,
Va., 1944-to date.
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index.
=Wright, Irene A.=, ed. Spanish policy toward Virginia, 1606-1612. Am.
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=Wyatt, Sir Francis.= Documents of Sir Francis Wyatt, governor,
1621-1626. W & M quar. (ser. 2), 7 (1927), 42-7; continued to 8
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=Before 1607=
=Canner, Thomas.= A relation of the voyage made to Virginia, in the
_Elizabeth_ of London, a barke of fiftie tunnes by Captaine
Bartholomew Gilbert, in the yeere 1603. In: Purchas his pilgrimes,
v. 4, p. 1656-1658.
=Hariot, Thomas.= A brief and true report of the new found land of
Virginia [1588; De Bry ed., 1590, with engravings of John White's
drawings]. N. Y., 1871. 33 p., 47 l.
Reprinted: London, 1893. 111 p.; London, 1900. 84 p.; N. Y.,
1903. 24 l.; [Monroe, N. C., n.d.] 48 p.; Ann Arbor, Mich.,
1931. 48 p.
=Pring, Martin.= Scheeps-togt van Martin Pringe, gedaan in 't jaar
1603. Van Bristol na 't Noorder-gedeelte van Virginien. Leyden,
1706. 16 p.
=Percy, George.= Observations gathered out of a discourse of the
plantation of the southerne colonie in Virginia by the English,
1606. In: Purchas his pilgrimes, v. 4, p. 1685-1690.
Reprinted: John Smith, Travels and works, ed. by Arber, v. 1,
p. lvii-lxxiii; Brown, Genesis of the U. S., v. 1, p. 152-68;
Tyler, Narratives of early Virginia, p. 5-23.
=Stoneman, John.= The voyage of M. Henry Challons, intended for the
North plantation of Virginia, 1606, taken by the way, and ill used
by the Spaniards. In: Purchas his pilgrimes, v. 4, p. 1685-1690.
=Virginia. Charter.= Part of the first patent granted by his maiestie
for the plantation of Virginia, Aprill the tenth, 1606. In:
Purchas his pilgrimes, v. 4, p. 1683-84.
=Virginia company of London.= Instructions by way of advice, for the
intended voyage to Virginia [1606]. In: John Smith, Travels and
works, ed. by Arber, v. 1, p. xxxiii-xxxvii.
Reprinted: Neill, History of the London company of Virginia, p.
8-14.
1607-1609
[=Archer, Gabriel=] Capt. Newport's discoveries, Virginia, May [1607].
A relatyon of the discovery of our river, from James forte into
the maine. Am. antiq. soc., Trans., v. 4, (1860), p. 40-65.
Includes "The description of the now-discovered river and
country of Virginia; with the liklyhood of ensuing ritches," p.
59-62. "A brief description of the people," p. 63-65.
The "relatyon" itself is reprinted in John Smith, Travels and
works, ed. by Arber, v. 1, p. xl-lv.
=Tindall, Robert.= Robert Tindall, gunner to Prince Henry. Letter to
the prince, 22 June 1607. In: John Smith, Travels and works, ed.
by Arber, v. 1, p. xxxviii-xxxix.
Reprinted: Brown, Genesis of the U. S., v. 1, p. 108-9.
=Virginia. Council, 1607.= Coppie of a letter from Virginia, dated 22d
of June, 1607. In: Brown, Genesis of the U. S., v. 1, p. 106-8.
=Ford, Worthington C.= Tyndall's map of Virginia [1608]. Mass. hist.
soc., Proc., 58 (1925), 244-47.
Includes facsimile reproduction.
=Smith, John.= The copy of a letter sent to the treasurer and councell
of Virginia, [1608?]. In: Brown, Genesis of the U. S., v. 1, p.
199-204.
____ A true relation of such occurrences and accidents of noate as hath
hapned in Virginia since the first planting of that collony, which
is now resident in the south part thereof, till the last returne
from thence. London, 1608. 36 p.
Reprinted: Boston, 1866. 88 p.; Smith, Travels and Works, ed. by
Arber, v. 1, p. 1-40; Tyler, Narratives of early Virginia, p.
25-71.
=Wingfield, Edward M.= A discourse of Virginia [1608]; ed. with notes
by Charles Deane. Boston, 1859. 44 p.
Reprinted: Am. antiq. soc., Transactions, 4 (1860), 67-103; John
Smith, Travels and works, ed. by Arber, v. 1, p. lxxiv-xci.
[=Archer, Gabriel=] A letter of M. Gabriel Archar, touching the voyage
of the fleet of ships, which arrived at Virginia, without Sir Tho.
Gates, and Sir George Summers, 1609. In: Purchas his pilgrimes, v.
4, p. 1733-34.
Reprinted: John Smith, Travels and works, ed. by Arber, v. 1, p.
xciv-xcvii; Brown, Genesis of the U. S., v. 1, p. 328-32.
=Crashaw, William.= A sermon preached in London before the right
honorable the Lord La Warre, Lord governour and Captaine generall
of Virginea, and others of his Majesties counsell for that
kingdome, and the rest of the adventurers in that plantation ...
Febr. 21, 1609. London, 1610. 91 p.
[=Gray, Robert=] A good speed to Virginia. London, 1609. 29 p.
Reprinted: N. Y., 1937. 43 p.
[=Johnson, Robert=] Nova Britannia. Offring most excellent fruites by
planting in Virginia. London, 1609. 31 p.
Reprinted: Force tracts, v. 1, no. 6. 28 p.; N. Y., 1867. 40 p.
=Price, Daniel.= Sauls prohibition staide; or, The apprehension and
examination of Saule. And to the inditement of all that persecute
Christ with a reproofe of those that traduce the honourable
plantation of Virginia. London, 1609. 40 p.
=Ratcliffe, John.= Captain John Ratcliffe _alias_ Sickelmore. Letter to
the Earl of Salisbury, 4 October 1609. In: John Smith, Travels and
works, ed. by Arber, v. 1, p. xcviii-xcix.
=Symonds, William.= Virginia. A sermon preached at White-Chappel, in
the presence of ... the adventurers and planters for Virginia, 25.
April. 1609. London, 1609. 54 p.
=Spelman, Henry.= Relation of Virginia, 1609. London, 1872. 58 p.
Reprinted: John Smith, Travels and works, ed. by Arber, v. 1, p.
ci-cxiv.
=Virginia company of London.= [Advertising the enterprise under the new
charter. London? 1609] Broadside. In: Brown, First republic, p.
100-104.
____ Instructions, orders and constitucions to Sir Thomas West, Knight,
Lord La Warr. [1609?] In: Kingsbury, Records of the Virginia
company, v. 3, p. 24-29.
____ Instruccions, orders and constitucions to Sir Thomas Gates,
Knight, Governor of Virginia. 1609. In: Kingsbury, Records of the
Virginia company of London, v. 3, p. 12-24.
____ A letter from the councill and company of the honourable
plantation in Virginia to the Lord Mayor, alderman and companies
of London [1609?]. In: Brown, Genesis of the U. S., v. 1, p.
252-54.
1610-1619
=Argall, Sir Samuel.= The voiage from James Towne to seeke the ile of
Bermuda, and missing the same, his putting over toward Sagadahoc
and Cape Cod, and so back againe to James Towne, begun the
nineteenth of June, 1610. In: Purchas his pilgrimes, v. 4, p.
1758-62.
=De la Warr, Thomas West=, 3rd lord. Lorde De la Warr to the right
honorable ... the Earl of Salisbury, 1610. In: Brown, Genesis of
the U. S., v. 1, p. 413-15.
[=Jourdain, Silvester=] A discovery of the Barmudas, otherwise called
the Ile of Divels; by Sir Thomas Gates, Sir George Sommers, and
Captayne Newport, with divers others. London, 1610. In: Force
tracts, v. 3, no. 3, p. 9-15.
Reprinted N. Y., 1940. 24 p.
=The proceedings of= the English colony in Virginia, from the beginning
of the plantation 1606, till anno 1610, somewhat abridged. In:
Purchas his pilgrimes, v. 4, p. 1705-33.
=Rich= [=Richard=] Newes from Virginia (1610). London, 1874. 19 p.
Reprinted: Neill, Early settlement of Virginia and Virginiola,
p. 29-35; [Boston, 1922] 14 p. (Americana series, photostat, no.
65); [N. Y., 1937] 29 p.
=Strachey, William.= A true repertory of the wracke, and redemption
of Sir Thomas Gates, Knight; upon, and from the ilands of the
Bermudas: his coming to Virginia, and the estate of that colonie
then, and after, under the government of the Lord La Warr, July
15, 1610. In: Purchas his pilgrimes, v. 4, p. 1734-58.
=Virginia company of London.= By the counsell of Virginea [Notice that
the ship _Hercules_ is now preparing to make a supply to the
colony of Virginia] [London? 1610] Broadside. In: Brown, Genesis
of the U. S., v. 1, p. 439.
____ A publication by the counsell of Virginea, touching the plantation
there. London, 1610. Broadside. In: Brown, Genesis of the U. S.,
v. 1, p. 354-356.
____ A true and sincere declaration of the purpose and ends of the
plantation begun in Virginia. London, 1610. 26 p.
Reprinted: Brown, Genesis of the U. S., v. 1, p. 338-53.
____ A true declaration of the estate of the colonie in Virginia, with
a confutation of such scandalous reports as have tended to the
disgrace of so worthy an enterprise. London, 1610. 68 p.
Reprinted: Force tracts, v. 3, no. 1. 27 p.
=Virginia. Council, 1610.= Letter of the Governor and council of
Virginia to the Virginia company of London. In: Brown, Genesis of
the U. S., v. 1, p. 402-13.
=Dale, Sir Thomas.= Letter to Lord Salisbury, 1611. In: Brown, Genesis
of the U. S., v. 1, p. 501-8.
____ Sir Thomas Dale to the president and counsell of the companie of
adventurers and planters in Virginia [1611]. In: Brown, Genesis of
the U. S., v. 1, p. 489-94.
=De la Warr, Thomas West=, 3rd lord. The relation of the right
honourable the Lord De la Warre. London, 1611. 15 p.
Reprinted: N. Y. [1868?] 17 p.; [London, 1858] 17 p.; Tyler,
Narratives of early Virginia, 209-214; Brown, Genesis of the U.
S., v. 1, p. 477-83.
=Depositions of= John Clarke and others, at Havana, 1611. Am. hist.
rev., 25 (1920), 467-73.
=Virginia company of London.= By the counsell of Virginea. [That a
fleet of good ships would soon be ready to sail for Virginia.]
London, 1611. Broadside. In: Brown, Genesis of the U. S., v. 1, p.
445.
=Whitaker, Alexander.= Whitaker to Crashaw ... 1611. In: Brown, Genesis
of the U. S., v. 1, p. 497-500.
=Experiences on journey= to America. Accurate transcript from the
Booke of proceedings and accidents of the first permanent English
settlement in America [1612] Connecticut mag., 11 (1907), 315-19.
Reprinted: Journal of Am. hist., 1 (1907), 206-8.
[=Johnson, Robert=] The new life of Virginea: declaring the former
successe and present estate of that plantation, being the second
part of Nova Britannia. London, 1612. 52 p.
Reprinted: Force tracts, v. 1, no. 7. 24 p.; Mass. hist. soc.,
Collections (ser. 2), 8 (1826), 199-223.
=McCary, Ben C.= Captain John Smith's map of Virginia [1612].
Williamsburg, 1957. (Jamestown 350th anniversary historical
booklet, No. 3.)
=Percy, George.= "A trewe relacyon." Virginia from 1609-1612. Tyler's
quarterly, 3 (1922), 259-82.
=The proceedings and accidents= of the English colony in Virginia,
extracted from the authors following, by William Simons, doctour
of divinitie [1612] In: John Smith, Travels and works, ed. by
Arber, v. 2, p. 383-488.
=The proceedings of= the English colonie in Virginia since their first
beginning from England in the yeere of our Lord 1606, till this
present 1612, with all their accidents that befell them in their
journies and discoveries. By W. S. Oxford, 1612. In: John Smith,
Travels and works, ed. by Arber, v. 1, p. 85-174.
Reprinted: Tyler, Narratives of early Virginia, p. 119-204.
=Smith, John.= The description of Virginia by Captaine John Smith,
inlarged out of his written notes. In: Purchas his pilgrimes, v.
4, p. 1691-1704.
____ A map of Virginia. With a description of the countrey, the
commodities, people, government and religion. Oxford, 1612, 39,
110 p.
Reprinted: Smith, Travels and works, ed. by Arber, v. 1, p.
41-174; Tyler, Narratives of early Virginia, p. 76-204.
Contents: [Vocabulary of Indian words.] The description of
Virginia. The proceedings of the English colonie in Virginia ...
till this present 1612.
[=Strachey, William=, ed.] For the colony in Virginea Britannia. Lawes
divine, morall and martiall. London, 1612. 41, 7 p.
Reprinted: Force tracts, v. 3, no. 2. 68 p.; Photostat
Americana, ser. 2, no. 16, Boston, 1936.
____ The historie of travell into Virginia Britania (1612); ed. by
Louis B. Wright and Virginia Freund. London, 1953. xxxii, 221 p.
Also ed. by R. H. Major, London, 1849. 203 p.
=Argall, Sir Samuel.= A letter touching his voyage to Virginia, and
actions there, written to Nicholas Hawes, June, 1613. In: Purchas
his pilgrimes, v. 4, p. 1764-65.
Reprinted: Brown, Genesis of the U. S., v. 2, p. 640-44.
=Dale, Sir Thomas.= Sir Thomas Dale's letter to Sir Thomas Smith, 1613.
Extract in: Brown, Genesis of the U. S., v. 2, p. 639-40.
[=Jourdain, Silvester=] A plaine description of the Barmudas, now
called Sommer Ilands. With the manner of their discoverie Anno
1609. London, 1613. 43 p.
Reprinted: Force tracts, v. 3, no. 3. 24 p.
=Virginia company of London.= A broadside [concerning the lottery]
1613. In: Brown, Genesis of the U. S., v. 2, p. 608-9.
____ By his Majesties councell for Virginia [On the lottery to be
held May 10, 1613] London, 1613. Broadside. In: Brown, Genesis
of the U. S., v. 2, p. 608-9; John Carter Brown Library, Three
proclamations.
=Whitaker, Alexander.= Good newes from Virginia. London, 1613. 14, 44 p.
Reprinted: [N. Y., 1936] 14, 44 p.
____ Part of a tractate written at Henrico in Virginia, 1613. In:
Purchas his pilgrimes, v. 4, p. 1771-73.
=Dale, Sir Thomas.= A letter of Sir Thomas Dale, and another of Master
Whitakers, from James Towne in Virginia, June 18, 1614. And a
piece of a tractate, written by the said Master Whitakers from
Virginia the yeere before. In: Purchas his pilgrimes, v. 4, p.
1768-1773.
=Hamor, Ralph.= Notes of Virginia affaires in the government of Sir
Thomas Dale and of Sir Thomas Gates till anno 1614. In: Purchas
his pilgrimes, v. 4, p. 1766-68.
____ A true discourse of the present estate of Virginia, and the
successe of the affaires there till the 18 of June, 1614. Together
with a relation of the severall English townes and fortes, the
assured hopes of that countrie and the peace concluded with the
Indians. The Christening of Powhatans daughter and her marriage
with an English-man. London, 1615. 69 p.
Reprinted: Albany, N. Y., 1860. 69 p.
=Rolfe, John.= The coppie of the Gentle-mans letters to Sir Thomas
Dale, that after married Powhatans daughter, containing the
reasons moving him thereunto [1614] In: Tyler, Narratives of early
Virginia, p. 239-44.
=Virginia company of London.= The reply of the Virginia council, 1614,
in defense of Argall. In: Brown, Genesis of the U. S., v. 2, p.
730-33.
____ A declaration for the certain time of drawing the great standing
lottery. London, 1615. Broadside. In: Brown, Genesis of the U.
S., v. 2, p. 684-685, 761-765; also in John Carter Brown library,
Three proclamations.
=Rolfe, John.= A true relation of the state of Virginia lefte by Sir
Thomas Dale, knight, in May last, 1616. From original manuscript
in the library of Henry C. Taylor, Esq. Edited by J. C. Wylie, F.
L. Berkeley, Jr., and John M. Jennings. New Haven, Conn., 1951. 29
p.
Printed earlier in Southern literary messenger, 5 (1839), 401-6;
reprinted Va., historical register, 1 (1848), 101-13.
=Smith, John.= Captain John Smith to Queen Anne [1616?] In: Brown,
Genesis of the U. S., v. 2, p. 784-88.
=Virginia company of London.= A briefe declaration of the present state
of things in Virginia [1616] In: Brown, Genesis of the U. S., v.
2, p. 774-79.
=Rolfe, John.= Letter of John Rolfe [to Edwin Sandys, 8 June], 1617.
Va. mag., 10 (1902), 134-138.
=Virginia company of London.= By his Majesties councell for Virginia
[relating the good condition of the colony at the return of Sir
Thomas Dale] [London? 1617] Broadside. In: Brown, Genesis of the
U. S., v. 2, p. 797-798.
=Adventurers to Virginia= [1618?]. In: Kingsbury, Records of the
Virginia company, v. 3, p. 79-90.
=Virginia company of London.= Instructions to George Yeardley, 1618.
In: Kingsbury, Records of the Virginia company, v. 3, p. 98-109.
=Of the lottery=: Sir Thomas Dales returne: the Spaniards in Virginia.
Of Pocahontas and Tomocomo: Captaine Yerdley and Captaine Argoll
(both since knights) their government; the Lord La-Warrs death,
and other occurrents till anno 1619. In: Purchas his pilgrimes, v.
4, p. 1773-75.
=Pory, John.= Letter of John Pory, 1619 secretary of Virginia, to Sir
Dudley Carleton. In: Tyler, Narratives of early Virginia, p.
282-87.
=Virginia. Assembly, 1619.= A reporte of the manner of proceedings in
the General assembly convened at James citty in Virginia, July 30,
1619. N. Y., hist. soc., Collections (ser. 2), 3 (1857), 329-58.
Reprinted: Colonial Records of Virginia, p. 9-32; Tyler,
Narratives of early Virginia, p. 249-78; Kingsbury, Records of
the Virginia company, v. 3, p. 153-77.
=Virginia company of London.= A note of the shipping, men, and
provisions sent to Virginia. London, 1619. 3 p.
Reprinted: Brown, First republic, p. 366; Va. mag., 6 (1898),
231-32; Kingsbury, Records of the Virginia company, v. 3, p.
115-17.
=Yate, Ferdinando.= Yate's account of a voyage to Virginia in 1619. N.
Y. public library, Bulletin, 1 (1897), 68-72.
Reprinted: Kingsbury, Records of the Virginia company, v. 3, p.
109-14.
1620-1629
[=Butler, Nathaniel=] Historye of the Bermudaes or Summer islands
[162-?] Ed. from a Ms. in the Sloane collection, British museum,
by J. H. Lefroy. London, 1882. 327 p. (Hakluyt soc., Works, no.
65)
[=Bonoeil, John=] Observations to be followed, for the making of fit
roomes, to keepe silke-wormes in: as also, for the best manner of
planting of mulberry trees, to feed them. London, 1620. 28 p.
"A valuation of the commodities growing and to be had in
Virginia, rated as they are worth," p. 25-8.
=Chester, Anthony.= Scheeps-togt van Anthony Chester, na Virginia.
Gedaan in het jaar 1620. Leyden, 1907. 15 p.
Translation by C. E. Bishop in W & M quar. (ser. 1), 9 (1901),
203-14.
=James I.= King of Great Britain. By the King [a proclamation
discontinuing the lotteries for the benefit of the colony of
Virginia] London, 1620. Broadside.
Reprinted: Brown univ., John Carter Brown library, Three
proclamations; Kingsbury, Records of the Virginia company, v. 3,
p. 434-35.
=Purchas, Samuel.= The estate of the colony, A.D., 1620. In: Purchas
his pilgrimes, v. 4, p. 1775-1779.
=Virginia company of London.= A declaration of the state of the colonie
and affaires in Virginia. London, 1620. 92 p.
Reprinted: Force tracts, v. 3, no. 5. 44, 26 p. Kingsbury,
Records of the Virginia company, v. 3, p. 307-65.
____ A note of the shipping, men and provisions sent and provided for
Virginia [London? 1620]. In: Kingsbury, Records of the Virginia
company, v. 3, p. 239-40.
____ Orders and constitutions, partly collected out of his Maiesties
letters patents, and partly ordained upon mature deliberation by
the treasuror, counceil and companie of Virginia. Anno 1619 and
1620. In: Force tracts, v. 3, no. 6. 26 p.
____ Treasuror, councell, and company for Virginia. [On the condition
of the colony.] [London, 1620] Broadside.
Reprinted: Kingsbury, Records of the Virginia company, v. 3, p.
275-80.
=Greevous grones for= the poore. Done by a well-willer, who wisheth,
that the poore of England might be so provided for, as none should
neede to go a begging within this realme. London, 1621. 24 p.
=News from Virginia= in letters sent thence 1621, partly published by
the company, partly transcribed from the originals with letters
of his maiestie, and of the company, touching silke-workes. In:
Purchas his pilgrimes, v. 4, p. 1785-88.
=Rolfe, John.= The will of John Rolfe [Jamestown, 10 March, 1621.
Edited] by Jane Carson. Va. mag., 58 (1950), 58-65.
=A true relation of a= sea fight between two great and well appointed
Spanish ships, or men of warre; and an English ship ... going for
Virginia [1621] In: Purchas his pilgrimes, v. 4, p. 1780-82.
Reprinted: Brown, First republic, p. 415-16.
=The answers of= divers planters ... unto a paper intituled The
unmasked face of our colony in Virginia. 1622. In: Kingsbury,
Records of the Virginia company, v. 2, p. 381-86.
=The barbarous massacre= committed by the savages on the English
planters, March the two and twentieth, 1622, after the English
accompt. In: Purchas his pilgrimes, v. 4, p. 1788-90.
[=Bonoeil, John=] His Maiesties gracious letter to the Earle of
South-Hampton, treasurer, and to the councell and company of
Virginia heere; commanding the present setting up of silke-works,
and planting of vines in Virginia. London, 1622. 88 p.
=Brinsley, John.= A consolation for our grammar schooles: or, A
faithfull and most comfortable incouragement, for laying of a
sure foundation of all good learning in our schooles, and for
prosperous building thereupon. More especially for all those of
the inferiour sort, and all ruder countries and places; namely,
for Ireland, Wales, Virginia, with the Sommer Ilands. London
[1622] 84 p.
Reprinted: N. Y., 1943. 84 p.
=Butler, Nathaniel.= The unmasked face of our colony in Virginia as it
was in the winter of the yeare 1622. In: Kingsbury, Records of the
Virginia company, v. 2, p. 374-76.
=Copland, Patrick.= A declaration how the monies (viz. seventy pound
eight shillings sixe pence) were disposed, which was gathered (by
M. Patrick Copland, preacher in the Royall James) at the Cape of
good hope, (towards the building of a free schoole in Virginia) of
the gentle men and marriners in the said ship ... London, 1622,
[8] p.
Reprinted: Kingsbury, Records of the Virginia company, v. 3, p.
537-40.
____ Virginia's God be thanked; or, A sermon of thanksgiving for the
happie successe of the affayres in Virginia this last yeare.
London, 1622. 36 p.
=Donne, John.= A sermon upon the VIII. verse of the I chapter of the
Acts of the Apostles. Preach'd to the honourable company of the
Virginian plantation, 13 Novemb. 1622. London, 1622. 49 p.
=Virginia company of London.= The inconveniences that have happened
to some persons which have transported themselves from England
to Virginia. London, 1622. Broadside. In: Brown, First republic,
486-87.
=Waterhouse, Edward.= A declaration of the state of the colony and
affaires in Virginia. London, 1622. 54 p.
Reprinted: Kingsbury, Records of the Virginia company, v. 3, p.
541-79.
=An answere to= a declaracion of the present state of Virginia, May,
1623. In: Kingsbury, Records of the Virginia company, v. 4, p.
130-151.
=A forme of polisie= to plant and governe many families in Virginia
[1623]. Am. hist. rev., 19 (1914), 560-78.
Reprinted: Kingsbury, Records of the Virginia company, v. 4, p.
408-35.
=Newton, Arthur P.=, ed. A new plan to govern Virginia, 1623. Am. hist.
rev., 19 (1914), 559-78.
=A note of provisions= necessarie for every planter or personall
adventurer to Virginia: and accidents since the massacre. In:
Purchas his pilgrimes, v. 4, p. 1791-93.
=Purchas, Samuel.= Of Virginia. In: Purchas his pilgrimes, v. 5, p.
828-45.
=Notes taken from= letters which came from Virginia [1623]. In:
Kingsbury, Records of the Virginia company, v. 4, p. 228-239.
=Smith, John (1580-1631).= The generall history of Virginia, the Somer
Iles, and New England, with the names of the adventurers and their
adventures.... [A prospectus]. [n.p., 1623?] 4 p.
=The Virginia planters'= answer to Captain Butler, 1623. In: Neill,
Virginia company of London, 395-404.
Reprinted: Kingsbury, Records of the Virginia company of London,
v. 2, p. 381-85; Tyler, Narratives of early Virginia, p. 412-18.
=Wyatt, Sir Francis.= Letter of Sir Francis Wyatt [1623?]. W & M quar.
(ser. 2), 6 (1926), 114-21.
=Good news from= Virginia, sent from James his town by a gentleman in
that country. London [1624?]. W & M quar. (ser. 3), 5 (1948),
353-58.
=Harvey, John.= A brief declaration of the state of Virginia, 1624.
Mass. hist. soc., Collections (ser. 4), 9 (1871), 60-81.
=James I.= King of Great Britain. A proclamation concerning tobacco
[restraining importation of tobacco except from Virginia and the
Somers islands] London, 1624. 4 p.
Reprinted: Hazard, Historical collections, v. 1, p. 193-98.
=Quo warranto and= proceedings, by which the Virginia company was
dissolved [1623-24]. In: Kingsbury, Records of the Virginia
company, v. 4, p. 295-358; translation from Latin, 358-98.
=Argall, Sir Samuel.= Briefe intelligence from Virginia letters, a
supplement of French-Virginian occurants, and their supplantation
by Sir Samuel Argal, in right of the English plantation [in the
year 1624]. In: Purchas his pilgrimes, v. 4, p. 1805-9.
=Virginia's verger:= or, A discourse shewing the benefits which may
grow to this kingdome from American English plantations, and
specially those of Virginia and Summer Islands. In: Purchas his
pilgrimes, v. 4, p. 1809-26.
=Smith, John.= The generall historie of Virginia, New-England, and the
Summer Isles. London, 1624. 248 p.
Reissued 1625, 1626, 1627, 1631, 1632. Reprinted, Richmond,
1819. 2 v.; London, 1884, 2 v.; Glasgow, 1907, 2 v.; Edinburgh,
1910, 2 v.
=Virginia.= Assembly, 1624. The tragical relation of the Virginia
assembly, 1624. In: Tyler, Narratives of early Virginia, p. 422-26.
=Charles I=, King of Great Britain. By the King: a proclamation for
setling the plantation of Virginia [1625]. With an intro. by
Thomas C. Johnson. Charlottesville, Va., 1946. 39 p.
=Considerations touching= the new contract for tobacco, [London] 1625.
11 p.
Reproduced: Americana series, no. 94 (photostat).
=James I.= King of Great Britain. A proclamation for the utter
prohibiting the importation and use of all tobacco which is
not the proper growth of the collonyes of Virginia and the
Sommer islands, or one of them [1625]. In: Hazard, Historical
collections, v. 1, p. 224-30.
=Virginia company of London.= The discourse of the old company, 1625.
Va. mag., 1 (1894), 155-67, 287-309.
Reprinted: Tyler, Narratives of early Virginia, p. 431-60;
Kingsbury, Records of the Virginia company, v. 4, p. 519-551.
=Hulsius, Levinus.= Zwantzigste schifffahrt, oder grundliche ...
beschreibung desz Newen Engellands ... der landtschafft Virginia,
und der insel Barmuda. Franckfurt, 1629.
Von der landtschafft Virginia, p. 39-116.
=Smith, John.= The true travels, adventures and observations of
Captaine John Smith, in Europe, Asia, Africke, and America:
beginning about the yeere 1593, and continued to this present
1629. London, 1630. 60 p.
Reprinted: Richmond, 1819. 2 v.; In his: Travels and works, ed.
by Arber, v. 2, 805-916; N. Y., 1930. 80 p.
1630-1639
=Charles I=, King of Great Britain. By the King; a proclamation
concerning tobacco. London [1631]. Broadside.
Reprinted: Richmond, 1952.
=Fleet, Henry.= A brief journal of a voyage made in the bark
"_Warwick_" to Virginia [1631]. In: Neill, English colonization of
America, p. 221-37.
=Smith, John.= Advertisements for the unexperienced planters of
New-England, or any where; or, The path-way to experience to erect
a plantation. London, 1631. 40 p.
Reprinted: Mass. hist. soc., Collections (ser. 3), 3 (1833),
1-53; John Smith, Travels and works, ed. by Arber, v. 2, p.
917-66.
=Smith, John.= The last will and testament of Captain John Smith
[1631]; with some additional memoranda relating to him [by Charles
Deane]. Cambridge, Mass., 1867. 7 p.
Reprinted: Mass. hist. soc., Proceedings (1867), p. 452-56.
[=Sandys, George=, trans.] Ovid's Metamorphosis Englished,
mythologiz'd, and represented in figures. Oxford, 1632. 525 p.
=Yong, Thomas.= Voyage to Virginia and Delaware Bay and river in 1634.
Mass. hist. soc., Collections (ser. 4), 9 (1871), 81-131.
[=Goodborne, John=] A Virginian minister's library, 1635; ed. by R. G.
Marsden. Am. hist. rev., 11 (1906), 328-32.
=Somerby, H. G.= Passengers for Virginia, 1635. New England hist. and
gen. register, 2 (1848), 111-13; continued to 5 (1851), 343-44,
and 15 (1861), 142-46.
=Hiden, Martha W.= Accompts of the _Tristram and Jane_ [a ship arriving
at Virginia, 1637]. Va. mag., 62 (1954), 424-47.
1640-1649
=Extract from a= manuscript collection of annals relative to Virginia
[in 1642]. Force tracts, v. 2, no. 6. 9 p.
=A servant in= England to his master in Virginia [1642]. W & M quar.
(ser. 1), 11 (1903), 243-44.
=Vries, David Pietersz de.= Voyages from Holland to America, A.D. 1632
to 1644, trans. from the Dutch by Henry C. Murphy. N. Y., 1853.
199 p.
Reprinted: N. Y. hist. soc., Collections (ser. 2), 3 (1857),
1-136.
=Castell, William.= A short discoverie of the coasts and continent of
America, from the equinoctiall northward, and of the adjacent
isles. London, 1644. 112 p.
=Lewis, Clifford=, ed. Some recently discovered extracts from the lost
minutes of the Virginia council and general court, 1642-1645. W &
M quar. (ser. 2), 20 (1939), 62-78.
=Great Britain.= Two ordinances of the Lords and Commons assembled
in Parliament [1643, 1645]. Whereby Robert Earle of Warwick is
made governor in chief, and L. high admirall of all those islands
and other plantations ... within the bounds, and upon the coasts
of America. London, 1645. [Boston, 1926] 6 p. (Americana series
photostat, no. 159)
=A description of the= province of New Albion. And a direction for
adventurers with small stock to get two for one, and good land
freely: and for gentlemen, and all servants, labourers and
artificers to live plentifully ... 1648. Force tracts, v. 2, no.
7. 35 p.
=Bullock, William.= Virginia impartially examined, and left to publick
view, to be considered by all judicious and honest men. London,
1649. 66 p.
[=Norwood, Henry=] A voyage to Virginia [1649]. In: Force tracts, v. 3,
no. 10. 50 p.
=A perfect description= of Virginia: being, a full and true relation
of the present state of the plantation.... Also, a narration of
the countrey, within a few dayes journey of Virginia, west and by
south. [London, 1649] Mass. hist. soc., Collections (ser. 2), 9
(1832), 105-22.
Reprinted: Force tracts, v. 2, no. 8. 18 p.
1650-1659
=Scisco, Louis D.= Exploration of 1650 in southern Virginia. Tyler's
quar., 7 (1926), 164-69.
=Williams, Edward.= Virgo triumphans: or, Virginia richly and truly
valued; more especially the south part thereof: viz. the fertile
Carolana, and no lesse excellent isle of Roanoak, of latitude from
31 to 37 degr. relating the meanes of raising infinite profits to
the adventurers and planters. London, 1650. 7, 47 p.
____ Virginia: more especially the south part thereof, richly and truly
valued. 2nd ed. London, 1650. 47 p.
First edition entitled: Virgo triumphans; or, Virginia richly
and truly valued.
Reprinted: Force tracts, v. 3, no. 11. 62 p.
____ Virginia's discovery of silke-wormes with their benefit. And the
implanting of mulberry trees. Also the dressing and keeping of
vines, for the rich trade of making wines there. Together with the
making of the saw-mill, very usefull in Virginia, for cutting of
timber and clapbord, to build withall. London, 1650. 75 p.
Part 2 of his Virginia: more especially the south part thereof,
richly and truly valued.
=An act prohibiting= trade with the Barbada's, Virginia, Bermudas
and Antego. London, 1650. In: A collection of several acts of
Parliament, 1648-1651, ed. by H. Scobell, London, 1651.
Reprinted: Hazard, Historical collections, v. 1, p. 636-38.
=An act of= indempnitie made att the surrender of the countrey [March
12, 1651]. In: Jefferson, Notes on Virginia; ed. by Peden, p.
116-17.
Reprinted: Hazard, Historical collections, v. 1, p. 563-64.
=An act for= increase of shipping, and encouragement of the navigation
of this nation. In: A collection of several acts of Parliament,
1648-1651, ed. by H. Scobell, London, 1651.
Reprinted: William MacDonald, ed., Select charters and other
documents illustrative of American history, 1606-1775, N. Y.,
1910, p. 106-110.
=Articles agreed on= & concluded at James Cittie in Virginia for the
surrendering and settling of that plantation under the obedience
& government of the common wealth of England by the Commissioners
of the Councill of state ... & by the Grand assembly ... of that
countrey [1651]. In: Jefferson, Notes on Virginia, ed. by Peden,
p. 114-16.
Reprinted: Hazard, Historical collections, v. 1, p. 560-61.
=Beschrijvinghe van Virginia=, Nieuw Nederlandt, Nieuw Engelandt, en
d'Eylanden Bermudes, Berbados en S. Christoffel. Amsterdam, 1651.
88 p.
[=Bland, Edward=, and others] The discovery of New Brittaine. Began
August 27, Anno. Dom. 1650 ... From Fort Henry, at the head of
Appamattuck river in Virginia, to the fals of Blandina, first
river in New Brittaine. London, 1651. 16 p.
Reprinted: N. Y., 1873. 16 p.; Alvord and Bidgood, The first
explorations of the Trans-Allegheny region, p. 114-30; Ann
Arbor, Mich., 1954. 10, 16 p.
=Copy of a petition= from the governor and company of the Summer
islands, with annexed papers ... with a short collection of ...
passages from the original to the dissolution of the Virginia
company, and a large description of Virginia. London, 1651. 30, 20
p.
=Somers Islands company.= Copy of a petition from the governor and
company of the Sommer islands. With annexed papers ... And a
large description of Virginia, with the several commodities
thereof. London, 1651. 30 p.
[=Wodenoth, Arthur=] A short collection of the most remarkable passages
from the originall to the dissolution of the Virginia company.
London, 1651. 20 p.
=Berkeley, Sir William.= The speech of the Hon. William Berkeley ... to
the burgesses in the Grand assembly at James Towne on the 17 of
March 1651/2. Va. mag., 1 (1893), 75-81.
[=Hartlib, Samuel=] Glory be to God on high, peace on earth, good will
amongst men. A rare and new discovery of a speedy way, and easie
means, found out by a young lady in England, she having made full
proofe thereof in May, Anno 1652, for the feeding of silk-worms in
the woods, on the mulberry-tree-leaves in Virginia. [London] 1652.
12 p.
=Withington, Lothrop.= Surrender of Virginia to the parliamentary
commissioners, March, 1651/52. Va. mag., 11 (1903), 32-41.
=The Lord Baltemore's= case, concerning the province of Maryland.
Adjoyning to Virginia in America. With full and clear answers to
all material objections, touching his rights, jurisdiction, and
proceedings there. London, 1653. 20 p.
Reprinted: Hall, Narratives of early Maryland, 167-80.
[=Hartlib, Samuel=] The reformed Virginian silk-worm, or, A rare and
new discovery of a speedy way, and easie means, found out by a
young lady in England, she having made full proof thereof in May,
anno 1652. London, 1655. 40 p.
Reprinted: Force tracts, v. 3, no. 13. 37 p.
=Virginia and Maryland.= Or, The Lord Baltamore's printed case, uncased
and answered. Showing the illegality of his patent and usurpation
of royal jurisdiction and dominion there. London, 1655. 52 p.
Reprinted: Force tracts, v. 2, no. 9. 47 p.; Hall, Narratives of
early Maryland, 187-230.
=Hammond, John.= Leah and Rachel or, The two fruitfull sisters
Virginia, and Maryland; their present condition, impartially
stated and related. London, 1656. 32 p.
Reprinted: Force tracts, v. 3, no. 14. 30 p.; Hall, Narratives
of early Maryland, p. 281-308.
[=Gatford, Lionel=] Publick good without private interest. Or, A
compendious remonstrance of the present sad state and condition of
the English colonie in Virginea. London, 1657. [Paris, 1866] 8, 26
p.
=Gorges, Ferdinando.= America painted to the life. The true history
of the Spaniards proceedings in the conquests of the Indians
... an absolute narrative of the north parts of America, and
of the discoveries and plantations of our English in Virginia,
New-England, and Berbadoes. London, 1658-59. 4 pts. in 1 v.
Pt. 2 "A briefe narration of the originall undertakings of
the advancement of plantations into the parts of America,"
reprinted: J. P. Baxter, ed., Sir Ferdinando Gorges and his
province of Maine, v. 2, p. 1-81.
1660-1669
=Bland, John.= To the Kings most excellent majesty; the humble
remonstrance of John Blande of London, merchant, on the behalf of
the inhabitants and planters in Virginia and Mariland. [London?
1661?] [Boston, 1940] 4 p. (Photostat Americana, ser. 2, no. 100)
[=Grave, John=] A song of Sion. Written by a citizen thereof, whose
outward habitation is in Virginia. [London, 1662] 12 p.
[=Greene, Robert=] Virginia's cure: or, An advisive narrative
concerning Virginia. Discovering the true ground of that churches
unhappiness, and the only true remedy. London, 1662. 22 p.
Reprinted: Force tracts, v. 3, no. 15. 19 p.
=Virginia.= General assembly. The lawes of Virginia now in force:
collected out of the Assembly records, and digested into one
volume. Revised and confirmed by the grand assembly held at
James-City, by prorogation, the 23d of March, 1661. London, 1662.
82 p.
=Berkeley, Sir William.= A discourse and view of Virginia. London,
1663. [Norwalk, Conn., 1914] 8, 12 p.
=Scarburgh, Edmond.= Document presented by C. C. Harper, Esq., from
the Committee on the library, enclosing Col. Edmond Scarburgh's
account of proceedings in an expedition from Virginia to
Annamessecks and Manokin, pursuant to an act of the Grand assembly
of Virginia, in the year 1663. Annapolis, Md., 1833. 16 p.
=Moray, Alexander.= Letters written from Ware river in Mockjack bay,
Virginia, Feb. 1, 1665. W & M quar. (ser. 2), 2 (1922), 157-61.
[=Ludwell, Thomas=] A description of the government of Virginia [1666].
Va. mag., 5 (1897), 54-59.
=Attacks by the= Dutch on the Virginia fleet in Hampton Roads in 1667.
Va. mag., 4 (1897), 229-45.
=Strange news from= Virginia, being a true relation of a great tempest
in Virginia, by which many people lost their lives, great numbers
of cattle destroyed, houses, and in many places whole plantations
overturned, and whole woods torn up by the roots. London, 1667. 7
p.
=Shrigley, Nathaniel.= A true relation of Virginia and Maryland; with
the commodities therein. London, 1669. In: Force tracts, v. 3, no.
7. 5 p.
=Revel, James.= "The poor unhappy transported felon's sorrowful account
of his fourtteen years transportation, at Virginia, in America
[1656?-1671?]" Reprinted, with introductory notes by John M.
Jennings. Va. mag., 56 (1948), 180-194.
1670-1679
[=Fallows, Robert.=] The expedition of Batts and Fallam. John Clayton's
transcript of the journal of Robert Fallam. A journal from
Virginia, beyond the Apailachian mountains, in Sept. 1671. Sent to
the Royal society by Mr. Clayton, and read Aug. 1, 1688, before
the said society. In: Alvord and Bidgood, the first explorations
of the Trans-Allegheny region, p. 183-205.
Reprinted: Am. anthropologist (new ser.), 9 (1907), 46-53.
____ The journal & relation of a new discovery made behind the Apuleian
mountains to the west of Virginia [1671]. In: Documents relative
to the col. hist. of the state of N. Y., v. 3 (1853), p. 193-97.
=Ogilby, John.= America: being the latest, and most accurate
description of the New World; containing the original of the
inhabitants, and the remarkable voyages thither. London, 1671. 674
p.
=Lederer, John.= The discoveries of John Lederer, in three several
marches from Virginia to the west of Carolina ... from the
original edition of 1672. Cincinnati, O., 1879. 33 p.
Reprinted: Charleston, S. C., 1891. 47 p.; Rochester, N. Y.,
1902. 30 p.
=An account of= the advantage of Virginia for building ships.
Communicated by an observing gentleman. Royal society of London,
Philos. trans., Apr. 21, 1673, p. 6015-16.
=Phillips, Philip L.= The rare map of Virginia and Maryland [1673] by
Augustine Herrman. Washington, 1911. 23 p.
=The kid-napper trapan'd=: or, The treacherous husband caught in his
own trap. Being a pleasant and true relation of a man in this town
that would have sold his wife to Virginia. London, 1675. 7 p.
=Bacon, Nathaniel.= Proclamations of Nathaniel Bacon [1676]. Va. mag.,
1 (1893), 55-63.
=Bacon's rebellion= [accounts by William Sherwood and Philip Ludwell].
Va. mag., 1 (1893), 167-86.
=Berkeley, Sir William.= A list of those that have been executed for
the late rebellion in Virginia. In: Force tracts, v. 1, no. 10. 4
p.
=Cotton, Mrs. Anne.= An account of our late troubles in Virginia.
Written in 1676. In: Force tracts, v. 1, no. 9. 12 p.
=Glover, Thomas.= An account of Virginia ... reprinted from the
Philosophical transactions of the Royal society, June 20, 1676.
Oxford, 1904. 31 p.
=Grantham, Sir Thomas.= An historical account of some memorable
actions, particularly in Virginia [1676]. London, 1716. Richmond,
1882. 71 p.
=The history of= Bacon's and Ingram's rebellion in Virginia, in 1675
and 1676. Mass. hist. soc., Proceedings (1866), 299-342.
Reprinted: Cambridge, Mass., 1867. 50 p.; Andrews, Narratives of
the insurrections, p. 47-98.
[=Mathew, Thomas=] The beginning, progress, and conclusion of Bacon's
rebellion in Virginia in the years 1675 and 1676. In: Force
tracts, v. 1, no. 8. 26 p.
Reprinted: Andrews, Narratives of the insurrections, p. 15-41.
=More news from= Virginia; a further account of Bacon's rebellion
reproduced in facsimile with an intro. by Thomas P. Abernethy.
Charlottesville, Va., 1943. 16 p.
=A narrative of= the Indian and civil wars in Virginia, in the years
1675 and 1676. In: Force tracts, v. 1, no. 11. 47 p.
A corrected version published in 1867 with title: The history of
Bacon's and Ingram's rebellion.
=A true narrative= of the rise, progress, and cessation of the late
rebellion in Virginia, most humbly and impartially reported by his
Majestyes commissioners appointed to enquire into the affaires of
the said colony [signed by John Berry and Francis Moryson]. Va.
mag., 6 (1896), 117-54.
Reprinted: Andrews, Narratives of the insurrections, p. 105-141.
=Virginias deploured condition=; or an impartiall narrative of the
murders comitted by the Indians there, and of the ... outrages of
Mr. Nathaniell Bacon, Junr., 1676. Mass. hist. soc., Collections
(ser. 4), 9 (1871), 162-76.
=Wertenbaker, Thomas J.= (ed.) The Virginia charter of 1676. Va. mag.,
56 (1948), 263-266.
=Articles of peace= between the most serene and mighty prince Charles
II ... and several Indian kings and queens, &c. Concluded the 29th
day of May, 1677. London, 1677. 18 p.
Reprinted: Va. mag., 14 (1907), 289-96.
=Most excellent Majesty.= 1677. [A treaty between the colony of
Virginia and several Indian tribes.] [Boston, 1940] 18 p.
(Photostat Americana, ser. 2, no. 103)
=Proposals in regard= to Virginia [1677]. Va. mag., 25 (1917), 71-74.
=Strange news from= Virginia; being a full and true account of the life
and death of Nathanael Bacon Esquire, who was the only cause and
original of all the late troubles in that country. With a full
relation of all the accidents which have happened in the late war
there between the Christians and Indians. London, 1677. 8 p.
1680-1689
=Banister, John.= Some observations concerning insects made in
Virginia, A.D. 1680, with remarks on them by Mr. James Petiver.
Royal society of London, Philos. trans., no. 270, March-April,
1701, p. 807-814.
=Godwin, Morgan.= The Negro's & Indians advocate suing for their
admission into the church: for a persuasive to the instructing and
baptizing of the Negro's and Indians in our plantations.... To
which is added, a brief account of religion in Virginia. London,
1680. 174 p.
=Jones, Lewis H.= Some recently discovered data relating to Capt Roger
Jones who came to the colony of Virginia with Lord Culpeper in
1680, including several letters written by him while a captain in
the British navy. W & M quar. (ser. 1), 27 (1918), 1-18.
=The vain prodigal= life, and tragical penitent death of Thomas
Hellier ... who for murdering his master, mistress and a maid,
was executed according to law at Westover in Charles City, in the
country of Virginia. London, 1680. 40 p.
=Godwin, Morgan.= A supplement to the Negro's & Indians advocate: or,
Some further considerations and proposals for the effectual and
speedy carrying of the Negro's Christianity in our plantations ...
London, 1681. 12 p.
[=Purvis, John=] A complete collection of all laws of Virginia now in
force. London [1684?] 300 p.
=Byrd, William=, 1652-1704. Capt. Byrd's letters [1683-1685]. Va. hist.
register, 1 (1848), 60-66, 114-19; 2 (1849), 78-83, 203-9.
____ Letters of William Byrd, first [1685]. Va. mag., 24 (1916),
225-37; continued to 28 (1920), 11-25.
=Godwin, Morgan.= Trade preferred before religion, and Christ made to
give place to mammon: represented in a sermon relating to the
plantations. London, 1685. 34 p.
[=Durand=, ____ of Dauphiné] A Huguenot exile in Virginia; or, Voyages
of a Frenchman exiled for his religion [1687] ... introductions
and notes by Gilbert Chinard. N. Y., 1934. 189 p.
Portions printed earlier [Richmond] 1923. 146 p.
=Clayton, John.= A letter ... to Dr. Grew, in answer to several queries
relating to Virginia, sent to him by that learned gentleman, 1687.
Royal society of London, Philos. trans., 41 (1739), 143-62.
____ John Clayton [to Dr. Grew(?), April 24, 1684]. W & M quar. (ser.
2), 1 (1921), 114-15.
=Custis, John= (1653-1713). Letters of John Custis, 1687. Colonial soc.
Mass. Publications, 19 (1918), 367-79.
=Page, John.= A deed of gift to my dear son, Captain Matt. Page, one
of his Majesty's justices for New Kent county, in Virginia. 1687.
Philadelphia, 1856. 276 p.
=Clayton, John.= A letter ... to the Royal society, May 12, 1688,
giving an account of several observables in Virginia, and in
his voyage thither, more particularly concerning the air. Mr.
Clayton's second letter, containing his farther observations
in Virginia. A continuation of Mr. John Clayton's account of
Virginia. His letter to the Royal society giving a farther account
of the soil, and other observables of Virginia. A continuation of
Mr. Clayton's account of Virginia. In: Edmund Halley, Miscellanea
curiosa, 2nd ed., London, 1723, v. 3, p. 281-355.
Reprinted: Force tracts, v. 3, no. 12. 45 p.
=James II.= King of Great Britain. Septima pars patentium de anno regni
regis Jacobi Secundi quarto, Sept. 27, [1688]. [Reaffirming the
grant of the Northern Neck in Virginia to Lord Culpeper.] [London?
1688] 6 p.
1690-1699
=Banister, John.= The extracts of four letters [from Virginia,
1668-1692] to Dr. Lister, communicated by him to the publisher.
Royal society of London, Philos. trans., no. 198, March 1693, p.
667-72.
[=Ludwell, Philip=] An alphabeticall abridgment of the laws of Virginia
[prepared in 1694]. Va. mag., 9 (1902), 273-88; continued to 10
(1903), 241-54.
=Rudman, Rev. Andrew John.= Diary of Rev. Andrew Rudman, July 25,
1696-June 14, 1697; ed. by Luther Anderson. German American
annals, 8 (1906), 282-312; continued to 9 (1907), 9-18.
=An essay upon the= government of the English plantations on the
continent of America (1701). An anonymous Virginian's proposals
for liberty under the British crown, with two memoranda by
William Byrd. Ed. by Louis B. Wright. San Marino, Calif., 1945. 66
p.
=Virginia.= Acts of assembly, passed in the colony of Virginia, from
1662, to 1715. v. 1. London, 1727. 391 p.
=Byrd, William.= The writings of Colonel William Byrd of Westover in
Virginia, esqr.; ed. by John S. Bassett. N. Y., 1901. 461 p.
Transcriber's Notes
This book contains 17th century text which may use different
orthography from modern English.
This book contains a number of illustrations reproducing the title
pages of original pamphlets and books. For the plain text version,
these have been transcribed "as is" within [Illustration] tags.
In the plain text version of this book, the following markup has
been used:
- Italic surrounded by _
- Small caps surrounded by =
- Decorative font surrounded by +
- Superscript text prefixed by ^
A number of printer's errors and inconsistencies have been corrected.
Research indicates that the copyright on this book was not renewed.
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Selected Bibliography of Virginia,
1607-1699, by Earl Gregg Swem and John Melville Jennings
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A Selected Bibliography of Virginia, 1607-1699
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[Illustration:
A
TRVE RE-
lation of such occur-
rences and accidents of noate as
hath hapned in Virginia since the first
planting of that Collony, which is now
resident in the South part thereof, till
the last returne from
thence.
_Written by Captaine_ Smith _Coronell of the said Collony, to a
worshipfull_ friend of his in England.
Printed for _Iohn Tappe_, and are to bee solde at the Grey-
hound in Paules-Church-yard, by _W.W._
=E. G. Swem=
Librarian...
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Book Information
- Title
- A Selected Bibliography of Virginia, 1607-1699
- Author(s)
- Jennings, John M. (John Melville), Swem, E. G. (Earl Gregg)
- Language
- English
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- Text
- Release Date
- February 28, 2017
- Word Count
- 16,452 words
- Library of Congress Classification
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- Browsing: Encyclopedias/Dictionaries/Reference, Browsing: History - American
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