The Cambridge History of the British Empire, Volume 1John Holland Rose, Arthur Percival Newton, Ernest Alfred Benians, Henry Dodwell The University Press, 1929 - Commonwealth countries |
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Page 579
The northern colonies were not responding to the policy of the Board of Trade , and that through no fault of their own . They were developing rapidly , and yet their direct trade with the mother country was comparatively small because ...
The northern colonies were not responding to the policy of the Board of Trade , and that through no fault of their own . They were developing rapidly , and yet their direct trade with the mother country was comparatively small because ...
Page 589
IMPORTANCE OF THE CONTINENTAL COLONIES 589 plantations of Virginia and Maryland and the rice fields of Carolina . This growth of population - mostly by natural increase — had its effect on trade . In the first part of the century the ...
IMPORTANCE OF THE CONTINENTAL COLONIES 589 plantations of Virginia and Maryland and the rice fields of Carolina . This growth of population - mostly by natural increase — had its effect on trade . In the first part of the century the ...
Page 897
Colonisation , colonial enterprises of Huguenots , 54-6 ; plan for settling English recusants in North America , 66 ; reasons urged in favour of , under Elizabeth , 68–9 ; Elizabethan colonies fail to attract sufficient capital ...
Colonisation , colonial enterprises of Huguenots , 54-6 ; plan for settling English recusants in North America , 66 ; reasons urged in favour of , under Elizabeth , 68–9 ; Elizabethan colonies fail to attract sufficient capital ...
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