Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 January 2009
1 Captain Smith, John in The generall historie of Virginia, New England, and the Summer Isles… (London, 1624)Google Scholar, in Barbour, Philip L., The Complete works of John Smith (3 vols) (Chapel Hill, 1986), 2, 140–2Google Scholar, states that the first planters numbered 100, of whom he names 82. Studley, Thomas in The proceedings of the English colony in Virginia… (Oxford, 1612)Google Scholar, in Barbour, , Works, 1, 207–9Google Scholar, states that the planters numbered 105, of whom he names 67.
2 The youngest brother of the ninth Earl of Northumberland, Henry Percy, George Percy served as president of the colony from August 1609 until mid-1610, and as deputy governor during the second charter.
3 Percy, George, Observations gathered out of a Discourse (1608)Google Scholar, in Barbour, Philip L. ed., The Jamestown voyages under the first charter 1606–1609 (2 vols) (Cambridge, 1969), 1, 129.Google Scholar
4 Ibid., at 1, 130.1 have retained the original spelling and punctuation in all quotations except to transpose ‘i’ and ‘j’ and ‘u’ and ‘v’ to correspond to modern usage. ‘And’ replaces the ampersand; ‘etc’ replaces ‘&c.’
5 Ibid.
6 Ibid.
7 Sir Thomas Gates, Sir George Somers, Richard Hakluyt, and Edward Maria Wingfield.
8 Barbour, , Jamestown, 1, 24.Google Scholar
9 Ibid., 1, 15.
10 Ibid., 1, 28.
11 Ibid., 1, 27. The ‘Letters patent’ state that the council in Virginia should have 13 councillors. Ibid., 1, 27. The ‘Articles, Instructions and Orders’ of 20 November 1606 state that the number of councillors ‘shal not be above thirteen’. Ibid., 1, 36. The Royal Council ultimately appointed seven councillors. See ibid., 2, 382. (This list of councillors does not include Christopher Newport who returned to England.)
12 Ibid., 1, 49–54.
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20 This paper does not address the attitude towards law of the Spanish settlers in the Americas. The Spaniards who attacked Dominica may have been pirates. Most certainly they were not planters whose goal was to establish their country's first colony in the New World.
21 Reid, John Philip, Law for the elephant: property and social behavior on the overland trail (San Marino, 1980), 19.Google Scholar
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23 Ibid., 7.
24 Ibid., 19.
25 The first charter was issued on 10 April 1606, the second on 23 May 1609, the third on 12 March 1612.
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31 Ibid., 1, 129–46.
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43 See, for instance, Elizabeth I's charter of 25 March 1584 to SirRaleigh, Walter in Commager, Henry Steele ed., Documents of American history (New York, 1944), 6.Google Scholar She granted Raleigh liberty to ‘discover… such remote, heathen and barbarous lands… not actually possessed by any Christian Prince’.
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63 Ibid., 37–9.
64 Ibid.
65 Ibid., 38.
66 Ibid., 37.
67 Ibid., 38.
68 Ibid.
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76 Ibid.
77 Ibid.
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81 Ibid.
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95 Ibid., 73; The Proceedings, 2, 417–18, implies that the sailors should be punished.
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97 I.e., mired in the wet mud of a river.
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99 Ibid.
100 Ibid.
101 Ibid., 83.
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104 Ibid.
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106 Ibid.
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109 Ibid.
110 Ibid., 67. The presence of women obviously attracted the planters to the Indian camps.
111 Ibid.
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113 Ibid., 1, 25.
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116 Ibid.
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162 Ibid., 2, 352–3.
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