[264]. Gibbon Wakefield. Cf. pp. 156-163 of his View of the Art of Colonization; Oxford, ed. 1914.
[265]. Dr. Garnett, cited by H. E. Egerton, Origin and Growth of Greater Britain (Oxford, 1903), p. 107.
[266]. Cal. State Pap., Col., 1574-1660, p. 26; A Century of Population Growth (Census Bureau, 1909), p. 9; C. P. Lucas, Historical Geography of the British Colonies (Oxford, 1905), vol. II, pp. 13, 179.
[267]. Century of Population, p. 9; F. B. Dexter, “Estimates of Population in American Colonies,” American Antiquarian Society Proceedings, 1889, vol. V, pp. 25, 32; Lucas, Historical Geography, pp. 142 f. 181. In 1645, there were 18,300 effective men in Barbadoes, which would indicate a much larger population. The population is given as 30,000 whites in 1650. F. W. Pitman, Development of the British West Indies (Yale Univ. Press, 1917), p. 370.
[268]. Winthrop Papers, Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., Series V, vol. VIII, p. 22.
[269]. B. W. Bond, Jr., The Quit-rent System in the American Colonies (Yale Univ. Press, 1919), pp. 15, 35.
[270]. Cunningham, English Industry, vol. II, pp. 36, 38; W. A. S. Hewins, English Trade and Finance, chiefly in the 17th Century (London, 1892), p. 108; R. H. Tawney, The Agrarian Problem, in the 16th Century (New York, 1912), p. 405; W. J. Ashley, Introduction to English Economic History and Theory (London, 1893), vol. II, pp. 286-88; G. Slater, “The Inclosure of Common Fields considered geographically,” Geographical Journal (London), vol. XXIX, pp. 39 f.; M. Aurosseau, “The Arrangement of Rural Populations,” Geographical Review, vol. X, pp. 321 f.
[271]. Newton, Puritan Colonisation, p. 79.
[272]. Victoria History of County of Lincoln (London, 1906), vol. II, p. 334.