[799] The map on the next page is sketched from a draft in the Kohl collection (219) of a map preserved in the British State Paper Office, bearing no date, but having the following legends in explanation of the lines of march:—
“1. — — — — The way Coll. Barnwell marched from Charlestown, 1711, with the forces sent from S. Carol. to the relief of N. Carolina.
“2. — · — · The way Coll. J. Moore marched in the 1712 with the forces sent for the relief of North Carolina.
“3. — ·· — ·· The way Corol. Maurice Moore marched in the year 1713 with recruits from South Carolina.
“4. ···· The way Corol. Maurice Moore went in the year 1715, with the forces sent from North Carolina to the assistance of S. Carolina. His march was further continued from Fort Moore up Savano river, near a N. W. course, 150 miles to the Charokee indians, who live among the mountains.”
[800] Cf. vol. i. 44-46, 100, 102, 105-7, 115, 118, 121, 160. See post ch. viii. and ante ch. iv. of the present volume.
[801] Cf. An abridgment of the laws in force and use in her majesty’s plantations, London, 1702. (Harvard College lib’y, 6374.20.) Chief Justice Trott—“a great man in his day,” says De Bow,—published a folio edition of South Carolina laws in 1736; and the Laws of South Carolina, published by Cooper (Columbia, S. C.), give by title only those enacted before 1685. Trott also published in London (1721) Laws of the British Plantations in America relating to the Church and the Clergy. (Harvard College lib’y, 6371.1.)
[802] H. C. Murphy, Catalogue, no. 2,344; Brinley, ii. no. 3,893. It is attributed to F. Yonge, whose View of the Trade of South Carolina, addressed to Lord Carteret, was printed about 1722 and 1723. Carter-Brown, iii. nos. 321, 337.
[803] Carter-Brown, iii. no. 371.
[804] An Act for establishing an Agreement with seven of the lords proprietors of Carolina for the surrender of their title and interest in that province to his Majesty. London, 1729. Brinley, no. 3,831.