[771] Vol. III. p. 125. The map of Florida in the 1618 edition of Lescarbot, in which the Rivière de May is made to flow from a “Grand Lac” in the interior, is said to have afforded in part the groundwork of De Laet’s map. Cf. also the map of Virginia and Florida (1635) in Mercator’s Atlas; the map “Partie meridionale de la Virginie et de la Floride,” published by Vander Aa. Johannis van Keulen’s Paskart van de Kust van Carolina, in his Atlas, is very rude.
[772] Sabin, iii. no. 10,969. The seal of the Proprietors is shown in Lawson’s map, and is reproduced in Dr. Eggleston’s papers in the Century Magazine, vol. xxviii. p. 848, and in The Charleston Year Book, 1883.
[773] Sabin, iii. no. 10,980; Carter-Brown, ii. no. 1,526, iii. no. 75; Murphy, no. 481; Harvard College library, nos. 6374.26 and 12352.2. Carroll, in printing the second charter granted by Charles II. (Hist. Coll., ii. 37), speaks of the original as being in the possession of Harvard University; but he must refer to the early printed copy, not the parchment. Both charters may be found in the Revised Statutes of North Carolina, 1837, and in the Statutes at Large of South Carolina, 1836. Hawks (vol. ii. p. 107) gives a synopsis of the two in parallel columns; and they are given in French and English in Mémoires des Commissaires du Roi, etc., vol. iv. (Paris, 1757) p. 554; and on p. 586, the second charter of June 13 (24), 1665. The second is also given in Dr. Wynne’s edition of the Byrd MSS., i. p. 197.
[774] Sabin, iii. no. 10,970; Carter-Brown, ii. no. 1,016.
[775] The original Fundamental Constitutions (81 articles) were signed July 21, 1669; a second form (120 articles), Mar. 1, 1669-70; a third (120 articles), Jan. 12, 1681-2; a fourth (121 articles), Aug. 17, 1682; a fifth and last (41 articles), Apr. 11, 1698.
[776] Carter-Brown, iii. no. 271; Sabin, x. no. 41,726. There was a second edition in 1739. The Fundamental Constitutions will also be found in Carroll’s Hist. Coll., ii. 361; in Martin’s North Carolina, App. i.; in Hewatt’s South Carolina and Georgia, i. 321, etc.
The most familiar portrait of Locke is Kneller’s, which has been often engraved. It was painted in 1697, and the several engravings by Vertue (1713, etc.) appeared in the Works of Locke, published in folio in London, in 1722 and 1727, and elsewhere, sometimes with different framework, and of reduced size, in the Familiar Letters of 1742 (fourth edition). The same likeness is the one given in editions of Lodge’s Portraits. There is also a folio mezzotint by John Smith (J. C. Smith, Brit. Mezzotint Portraits, iii. 1190). A different head is that engraved by James Basire in the London editions of the Works, 1801 and 1812.
[777] Mr. Henry F. Waters sent the photograph from London, but the map had already been noticed inquiringly by Dr. De Costa in the Mag. of Amer. Hist., Jan., 1877 (vol. i. p. 55).
[778] Brinley Catalogue, ii. no. 3,869; Harvard College library, no. 12355.7. It is reprinted in Force’s Tracts, vol. iv., and in the Charleston Year Book for 1884.
[779] North Carolina, ii. p. 78.