____ 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.