[904]. H. E. Egerton, in Cambridge Modern History, vol. IV, p. 758; V. L. Oliver, History of the Island of Antigua (London, 1894-99), vol. I, p. xxxix; Cal. State Pap., Col., 1661-68, pp. 545, 169 ff., 96.
[905]. Cited by Mims, Colbert's West Indian Policy, p. 222.
[906]. Cal. State Pap., Col., 1675-76, p. 153.
[907]. Cal. State Pap., Col., 1574-1660, pp. 384, 408.
[908]. Ibid., 1685-88, p. 49.
[909]. New England's true Interest not to Lie; cited by Tyler, History of American Literature (New York, 1879), vol. II, p. 163.
[910]. Massachusetts Records, vol. II, p. 203.
[911]. Conn. Col. Records, vols. II, p. 307, and III, p. 9; Plymouth Records, vol. II, pp. 81, 102. Rhode Island seems to have been backward, but had at least one school as early as 1640. Vide Arnold, Rhode Island, vol. I, p. 145.
[912]. Massachusetts Records, vol. I, p. 183; G. M. Wrong, Conquest of New France (Yale University Press, 1918), p. 42.
[913]. Cf. Virginia Magazine, vols. III, pp. 388 ff., VII, pp. 299 ff., X, pp. 399 ff., and XVII, pp. 147 f.; William and Mary Quarterly, vols. II, pp. 169 ff., III, pp. 43 f., 132 f., 180 f., 246 f., and IV, pp. 15 f., 94, 156. Cf. J. H. Tuttle “The Libraries of the Mathers,” in American Antiquarian Society Proceedings, N. S., vol. XX, pp. 269 ff.