ABSTRACT

Written by one of the leading authorities on trade and finance in the early modern Atlantic world, these fourteen essays, revised and integrated for this volume, share as their common theme the development of the Atlantic economy, especially British America and the Caribbean. Topics treated range from early attempts in medieval England to measure the carrying capacity of ships, through the advent in Renaissance Italy and England of business newspapers that reported on the traffic of ships, cargoes and market prices, to the state of the economy of France over the two hundred years before the French Revolution and of the British West Indies between 1760 and 1790. Included is the story of Thomas Irving who challenged and thwarted the likes of John Hancock, Samuel Adams, Alexander Hamilton, George Washington and Thomas Jefferson.

chapter 4|18 pages

Weights and Measures in the Colonial Sugar Trade

The gallon and the pound and their international equivalents

chapter 5|9 pages

The Rate oF Exchange on Amsterdam in London, 1590–1660

Co-authored with Simon Hart 1

chapter 8|9 pages

New York City and The Bristol Packet

A chapter in eighteenth-century postal history

chapter 9|19 pages

Colonial Civil Servant and Counter-Revolutionary

Thomas Irving (1738?–1800) in Boston, Charleston, and London

chapter 13|14 pages

Money Supply, Economic Growth, and the Quantity Theory of Money

France, 1650–1788

chapter 14|13 pages

The Economy of the British West Indies, 1763–1790

Growth, stagnation, or decline?