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.