[31]. Plantation Papers, p. 96.
[32]. Patent Rolls, 20 James I., Part III., lxii., 27 Dorso.
[33]. Plantation Papers, p. 29. An early and unsuccessful attempt to plant had been made on Sir Oghie O’Hanlon’s land in 1569; it had been taken from him and given to Captain Chatterton. Chatterton was killed, and as nobody would venture to plant the land, it was restored to O’Hanlon. An interesting proclamation of Carew’s in 1603, on the subject of the rate of wages in the North of Ireland, is given in Plantation Papers, p. 79.
[34]. Patent Rolls, 12 James I., I., viii., 2. Lady O’Dogherty was about to proceed to London in pursuit of relief, and as Chichester found that her marriage money had never been paid by her brother, Lord Gormanstown, he got the king to give her £40 a year during pleasure out of the rents of Inishowen. State Papers (1609), p. 216. Patent Rolls, 14 James I., lxxxii., 14 Dorso, Part I., and 14 James I., vi., 8, Part 2, Facie.
[35]. Patent Rolls, James I., pp. 48, 443. Plantation Papers, pp. 19, 190, 119.
[36]. Patent Rolls, James I., pp. 312, 314. Plantation Papers, pp. 19, 119, 190.
[37]. Reid, Presbyterianism in Ulster, I., pp. 103, 104.
[38]. Prendergast, Ireland from the Restoration to the Revolution (1660-1690), p. 98.
[39]. Hill, Plantation Papers, p. 67, ff.
[40]. Plantation Papers, pp. 26, 189.