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The British Atlantic World: Co-ordination, Complexity, and the Emergence of an Atlantic Market Economy, 1651-1815*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 June 2011

Abstract

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Type
Round Table Conference: The Nature of Atlantic History
Copyright
Copyright © Research Institute for History, Leiden University 1999

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References

Notes

1 Godechot, Jacques and Palmer, Robert, ‘Le Probléme de l'Atlantique du XVIIIème Siècle’, Relazioni del X Congresso Internazionale di Scienze Storiche, Storia Contemporanea 5 (Florence 1955)Google Scholar; Chaunu, Pierre, Sevilleet l'Atlantique 8/1 (Paris 1959)Google Scholar ; Farnie, D.A., ‘The Commercial Empire of the Atlantic, 1607–1783’, Economic History Review, second series, 15 (1962) 205218Google Scholar ; Meinig, Donald, The Shaping of America: A Geographical Perspective on 500 Years of History 1 (New Haven 1986) 65Google Scholar ; Bailyn, Bernard, ‘The Idea of Atlantic History’, Itinerario 20/1 (1996) 1214, 33CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also Thornton, John, Africa and Africans in the Making of the Atlantic World, 1400–1800 (Cambridge 1998) 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar (‘interactions on an intercontinental scale’). Cultural and literary historians have not been shy about extending the definition and broadening the subject, at least in theory. Beginning in the 1970s, John Pocock began to call for the study of a pan-Atlantic culture, but, oddly, what distinguished that culture were English language and institutions. Schochet, Gordon J. ed., Empire and Revolutions (Washington 1993)Google Scholar. In Cities of the Dead: Circum-Atlantic Performance (New York 1996)Google Scholar, Joseph Roach (heavily influenced by Paul Gilroy's The Black Atlantic) struggles to recreate the flow of information around the Atlantic in his analysis of the relationship of memory, performance, and substitution and to locate ‘the peoples of the Caribbean rim at the heart of an oceanic interculture embodied through performance’; in the end, though, he succeeds merely in comparing theatrical performance only in London and New Orleans. Brown, Laura, Ends of Empire (Ithaca 1993)Google Scholar, is more successful in writing a history of one aspect of ‘oceanic interculture’ – the way the image of the female shaped capitalist commodification in early eighteenth-century English literature; her world, though, is only a community of the mind. Unfortunately, few scholars have picked up the gauntlet thrown down by the geographer Donald Meinig. The exception may be the work of slave-trade scholars, whose new work highlights the ‘interactivity’ of peripheral regions. See Law, Robin and Mann, Kristin, ‘West Africa in the Atlantic Community: The Case of the Slave Coast’, William and Mary Quarterly, third series, 66 (1999) 307334CrossRefGoogle Scholar ; and Lovejoy, Paul and Richardson, David, ‘Trust, Pawnship, and Atlantic History: The Institutional Foundations of the Old Calabar Slave Trade’, The American Historical Review 104 (1999) 333355CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed.

2 I borrowed the phrasing of the organisers of the Itinerario conference.

3 Quinn, David B., North America from Earliest Discovery to First Settlements: The Norse Voyages to 1612 (New York 1977)Google Scholar ; Davis, Ralph, The Rise of the English Shipping Industry in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries (London 1962)Google Scholar ; Pares, Richard, War and Trade in the West Indies, 1739–1763 (London 1963)Google Scholar ; Dickson, Peter, The Financial Revolution in England (London 1967)Google Scholar ; Brewer, John, The Sinews of Power: War, Money, and the English State, 1688–1783 (New York 1989)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. On the presence of foreign lenders in the Montserrat and South Carolina mortgage markets, see Hancock, David, ‘“Capital and Credit with Approved Security”: Financial Markets in Montserrat and South Carolina, 1748–1775’, Business and Economic History 23 (Winter 1994) 68, 7273Google Scholar.

4 Quinn, , North America from Earliest Discovery, 513532Google Scholar. See also Innis, Harold A., The Cod Fisheries: The History of an International Economy (revised edition, Toronto 1954)Google Scholar. For studies of the fisheries in later periods, see the four essays by James G. Lydon.

5 Steele, Ian K., The English Atlantic: An Exploration of Communication and Community (Oxford 1986)Google Scholar.

6 Dickerson, Oliver M., The Navigation Acts and the American Revolution (Philadelphia 1951)Google Scholar ; Pares, Richard, Yankees and Creoles: The Trade between North America and the West Indies before the American Revolution (Cambridge 1956) 5761Google Scholar ; and Pares, War and Trade. There is little to recommend on smuggling in the British Atlantic, a topic which, given the extent of the phenomenon, has been woefully under-acknowledged. Historians of British America have been loath to admit its extent. Dickerson, , Navigation Acts, 6970Google Scholar ; Barrow, Thomas C., Trade and Empire: The British Customs Service in Colonial America, 1660–1775 (Cambridge 1967)Google Scholar ; and McCusker, John J. and Menard, Russell R., The Economy of British America, 1607–1789 (Chapel Hill 1985) 49Google Scholar. The case is very different with other empires. Frostin, Charles, Histoire de l'autonomisme colon de la partie de St. Domingue aux XVJIe et XVIIIe siecles (Lille 1973)Google Scholar ; Malamud, Carlos D., ‘El comercio directo de Europa con America en el siglo XVIII’, Quinto Centenario 1 (1981) 2552Google Scholar ; Hanson, Carl. A., ‘Monopoly and Contraband in the Portuguese Tobacco Trade, 1624–1702’, Luso-Brazilian Review 19 (1982) 149–168Google Scholar ; McNeill, John R., Atlantic Empires of France and Spain: Louisburg and Havana, 1700–1763 (Chapel Hill 1985)Google Scholar ; Moutoukias, Zacarias, ‘Power, Corruption, and Commerce: The Making of the Local Administrative Structure in Seventeenth-Century Buenos Aires’, Hispanic American Historical Review 68 (1988) 771801CrossRefGoogle Scholar ; Ramos, Hector R. Feliciano, El contrabando ingles en el Caribey el Golfo de Mexico (1748–1778) (Seville 1990)Google Scholar ; Aguirre, Ramón Aizpurua, Curazao y la costa de Caracas: Introducción al estudio del contrabando en la provincia de Venezuela en tiempos de la Compania Guipuzcoana, 1730–1780 (Caracas 1993)Google Scholar ; Grahn, Lance, The Political Economy of Smuggling: Regional Informal Economies in Early Bourbon New Granada (Boulder 1997)Google Scholar ; Klooster, Wim, Illicit Riches: Dutch Trade in the Caribbean, 1648–1795 (Leiden 1998)Google Scholar. I am indebted to Wim Klooster for some of this information.

7 Anderson, Virginia, New England's Generation (New York 1991)CrossRefGoogle Scholar ; Kupperman, Karen, Providence Island (New York 1993)Google Scholar ; Smith, Abbot, Colonists in Bondage (Chapel Hill 1947)Google Scholar ; Galenson, David, White Servitude in Colonial America (New York 1981)Google Scholar ; Morgan, Edmund, American Slavery, American Freedom (New York 1975)Google Scholar ; Kulikoff, Alan, Tobacco and Slaves (Chapel Hill 1986)Google Scholar. Despite the fine-tuning of export volumes, still the best account of the movement of Africans is Curtin, Philip, The Atlantic Slave Trade: A Census (Madison 1969)Google Scholar ; see also Rawley, James, The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade: A History (New York 1981)Google Scholar.

8 Bailyn, Bernard, The Peopling of British North America: An Introduction (New York 1986)Google Scholar ; Wokeck, Marianne, ‘Harnessing the Lure of the “Best Poor Man's Country”: The Dynamics of German-Speaking Immigration to British North America, 1683–1783’ in: Altman, Ida and Horn, James eds, To Make America': European Emigration in the Early Modern Period (Berkeley 1991) 204243Google Scholar. For further work on the Germans, see Wokeck, Marianne S., Trade in Strangers: The Beginnings of Mass Migration to North America (University Park 1999)Google Scholar ; Wellenreuther's, Hermann remarks on governmental bureaucracy are especially vivid, in Lehman, Hartmut et al. eds, In Search of Peace and Prosperity (University Park 1999)Google Scholar ; Fogelman, Aaron S., Hopeful Journeys: German Immigration, Settlement, and Political Culture in Colonial America, 1717–1775 (Philadelphia 1996)CrossRefGoogle Scholar, who is especially insightful on the complexity of political circumstances which emigrants left behind; O'Reilly, William T., ‘“A Paragon of Wickedness”: Newlanders and Agents in Eighteenth-Century German Migration’ (unpublished paper, International Seminar on the History of the Atlantic World, Harvard University 1996)Google Scholar, on those who recruited the immigrants; and Wokeck, Marianne S., ‘Promoters and Passengers: The German Immigrant Trade, 1683–1775’ in: Richard, and Dunn, Mary eds, The World of William Penn (Philadelphia 1986) 259278Google Scholar. A more recent compilation of immigration studies appears in Canny, Nicholas ed., Europeans on the Move: Studies on European Migration, 1500–1800 (New York 1995)Google Scholar.

9 Solow, Barbara L., ‘Capitalism and Slavery in the Exceedingly Long Run’ in: Solow, Barbara L. and Engerman, Stanley L. eds, British Capitalism and Caribbean Slavery: The Legacy of Eric Williams (Cambridge 1987) 5177Google Scholar. On the Dutch role in the English colonies' use of slaves, a role now under investigation, see Innes, F. G., ‘The Pre-Sugar Era of European Settlement in Barbados’, Journal of Caribbean History 1 (1970) 122Google Scholar ; and Puckrein, Gary A., The Acquisitive Impulse: Plantation Society, Factions, and the Origins of the Barbadian Civil War (1627–1652)’ (PhD thesis Brown University 1978)Google Scholar.

10 Kussmaul, Ann, Servants in Husbandry in Early-Modern England (Cambridge 1981)CrossRefGoogle Scholar ; Galenson, David, White Servitude in Colonial America: An Economic Analysis (Cambridge 1981)Google Scholar. See also Malcolmson, Robert, Life and Labour in England, 1700–1780 (London 1981)Google Scholar ; Emmer, Pieter ed., Colonialism & Migration: Indentured Labour Before and After Slavery (Dordrecht 1986)CrossRefGoogle Scholar ; Salinger, Sharon, To Serve Well and Faithfully': Labour and Indentured Servants in Pennsylvania, 1682–1800 (Cambridge 1987)Google Scholar.

11 On the history of mercantilistic thought, see Hecksher, Eli F., Mercantilism (London 1935)Google Scholar ; Cole, Charles W., Colbert and A Century of French Mercantilism (New York 1939)Google Scholar ; Knorr, Klaus, British Colonial Theories, 1570–1850 (Toronto 1944)Google Scholar ; Wilson, C.H., Mercantilism (London 1958)Google Scholar ; Koehn, Nancy F., The Power of Commerce: Economy and Governance in the First British Empire (Ithaca 1994)Google Scholar ; and Minard, Phillippe, La Fortune du Colbertisme: etat et industrie dans la France des Lumieres (Paris 1998)Google Scholar.

12 Robbins, Caroline, The Eighteenth-Century Commonwealthman (Cambridge 1959)CrossRefGoogle Scholar ; Bailyn, Bernard, The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution (Cambridge 1967)Google Scholar. On the global reaction to and appropriation of the principles and examples of the Revolution, see Echeverria, Durand, Mirage in the West (Princeton 1957)Google Scholar ; Dippel, Horst, Germany and the American Revolution (Chapel Hill 1977)Google Scholar ; Nordholt, Jan Willem Schulte, The Dutch Republic and American Independence (Chapel Hill 1982)Google Scholar ; Poelgeest, Bart Van, ‘The Influence of the American Constitution on Dutch Lawyers, Judged by the Dutch Debate on Judicial Review’ in: Kroes, Rob and Bilt, Eduard Van De eds, The U.S. Constitution: After 200 Years (Amsterdam 1988) 137159Google Scholar ; Doyle, David, Ireland, Irishmen and Revolutionary America, 1760–1820 (Dublin 1981) 150, 152–180Google Scholar ; Williams, Glyn, The Search for Beulah Land: The Welsh and the Atlantic Revolution (London 1980)Google Scholar ; Piecuch, James, ‘A War Averted: Luso-American Relations in the Revolutionary Era, 1775–1786’, Portuguese Studies Review 5 (19961997) 2236Google Scholar ; Walker, Timothy and Gaspar, Diogo, ‘Demands of Empire – the Portuguese Reaction to the American War of Independence’ (1977) (unpublished paper, 1998 International Seminar on the History of the Atlantic World, Harvard University)Google Scholar ; Kinaly, Bela and Barany, George, eds, East Central European Perceptions of Early America (Lisse 1977) 19–32, 97106Google Scholar ; Bolkhovitinov, N.N., The Beginnings of Russian-American Relations, 1775–1815 (Cambridge 1975)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

13 Davis, Ralph, The Rise of the Atlantic Economies (London 1973)Google Scholar ; Price, Jacob, Capital and Credit in British Overseas Trade: The View from the Chesapeake, 1700–1776 (Cambridge 1980)CrossRefGoogle Scholar ; Steele, , The English Atlantic, David Hancock, Citizens of the World: London Merchants and the Integration of the British Atlantic Community, 1735–1785 (Cambridge 1995)Google Scholar.

14 Morgan, Kenneth, Bristol & the Atlantic Trade in the Eighteenth Century (Cambridge 1993) 910CrossRefGoogle Scholar, traces the stretching of one port's commercial lines. Similarly, American commodities were shipped to newer, more distant markets, as the century wore on. Price, Jacob, France and the Chesapeake: A History of the French Tobacco Monopoly, 1674–1791, and of Its Relationship to the British and American Tobacco Trades (Ann Arbor 1973)Google Scholar, and The Tobacco Adventure to Russia: Enterprise, Politics, and Diplomacy in the Quest for a Northern Market for English Colonial Tobacco, 1676–1722 (Philadelphia 1961)Google Scholar ; Clemens, Paul, The Atlantic Economy and Colonial Maryland's Eastern Shore: From Tobacco to Grain (Ithaca 1980)Google Scholar ; Coclanis, Peter, The Shadow of a Dream: Economic Life and Death in the South Carolina Low Country, 1670–1920 (New York 1989)Google Scholar ; and Nash, R.C., ‘South Carolina and the Atlantic Economy in the Late Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries’, Economic History Review 45 (1992) 677702CrossRefGoogle Scholar. On cloth distribution world-wide, see Irwin, John and Brett, Katharine, The Origins of Chintz (London 1970) 36Google Scholar.

Another mark of the integration was the rise of similar institutions and ideologies in different countries, many of which arose in emulation of or in response to the institutions in other countries. Similar cities served similar functions around the Atlantic rim, for instance. Perotin-Dumon, Anne, 7Cabotage, Contraband, and Corsairs: The Port Cities of Guadeloupe and Their Inhabitants’ in: Knight, Franklin W. and Liss, Peggy K. eds, Atlantic Port Cities (Knoxville 1991) 61Google Scholar. Moreover, distinct similarities among labour markets emerged. Rediker, Marcus, Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea: Merchant Seamen, Pirates and the Anglo-Maritime World, 1700–1750 (New York 1993) 80Google Scholar. Similar kinds of economic management – plantation experts – also appeared in all empires and created ‘a unique market-oriented set of cash crop-producing areas’. Emmer, P.C., ‘The Dutch and the Making of the Second Atlantic System’ in: Solow, Barbara L. ed., Slavery and the Rise of the Atlantic System (New York 1991) 79Google Scholar.

15 Hancock, , Citizens, 1617Google Scholar.

16 Ibid., 36–37.

17 Complex, nonlinear, dynamical, adaptive systems have been increasingly studied by a number of specialists in a variety of fields, such as chemistry, geology, physics, and artificial intelligence. The best, most succinct introductions to the plethora of ideas appear in Lewin, R., Complexity: Life at the Edge of Chaos (New York 1992)Google Scholar ; and Nicolis, G. and Prigogine, I., Exploring Complexity (New York 1989)Google Scholar. In economics, see W. Brian Arthur, ‘Inductive Reasoning and Bonded Rationality’ and Krugman, Paul, ‘Complex Landscapes in Economic Geography’, The American Economic Review: Papers and Proceedings 84 (1994) 406416Google Scholar.

18 Vaughan, Alden, ‘The Origins Debate: Slavery and Racism in Seventeenth-Century Virginia’, The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 97 (1989) 311354Google Scholar.

19 Galenson, , White Servitude, passim and Traders, Planters, and Slaves: Market Behaviour in Early English America (Cambridge 1986) 145150CrossRefGoogle Scholar. An insightful assessment of the weaknesses and strengths of economic theory is offered by Lamoreaux, Naomi R. et al. , Learning by Doing in Markets, Firms, and Countries (Chicago 1999) 117Google Scholar.

20 Another feature exhibited by complex systems and relevant to the emergence of a market is decentralised authority. No metropolis exerted uncontested, final control in the world. In any one economic or commercial act, there were a variety of centres that actors had to consider and address. Regarding the eighteenth-century Atlantic economy as a complex economic and social system turns the searchlight away from the traditionally privileged centre, the large European metropolis. That is not to say that there were no centrally directed conditions or influences under which Atlantic trade developed – only that they were not in the end dispositive. Furthermore, related to both self-organisation and decentralisation is a flexible causative principle shaping how the ‘macro’ related to the ‘micro’ and vice versa in a vast cross-imperial economy. That is to say, by looking at structures and institutions from the vantage of their complexity and following that complexity along the production/distribution/consumption chain, one finds that both the few directive links among people and the large-scale anonymous forces created the conditions for action and reaction; they did not cause those actions, although, in their choice of explanatory devices, historians favour the isolation of deterministic forces. In complex systems like the Atlantic market economy, the Navigation Acts or the agricultural productivity of the Americas, for instance, are more appropriately regarded as conditions, not causes, of the patterns of trade. This principle is not so much a feature of the world, as it is a commentary on its features and how they mediate macro-forces and micro-events and -individuals. If one cares about individual people's lives, individual firms' successes, and individual products' acceptances, then the macro-level phenomena like the Navigation Acts, American agricultural productivity or the changing nature of the workforce go only so far towards explaining particular outcomes. The links and forces did not cause the events, but they did set up conditions under which they worked; they affected them, not so much directly, but indirectly along a long trans-oceanic chain that was stretched across the centuries.

21 Krugman, , The Self-Organizing Economy (Cambridge 1996) 3, vi, 36Google Scholar. See also Scheink-man, Jose A. and Woodford's, MichaelSelf-Organized Criticality and Economic Fluctuations’, The American Economic Review: Papers and Proceedings 84 (May 1994) 417421Google Scholar ; and Bak, P. Per and Chen, Kan, ‘Self-Organizing Criticality’, Scientific American 264 (January 1991) 46–53CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

22 Hancock, David, ‘“A World of Business to Do”: William Freeman and the Foundations of England's Commercial Empire, 1645–1707’, William and Mary Quarterly (forthcoming January 2000)Google Scholar.

23 The Pennsylvania Gazette, 12 May 1737 (Valentine, John), 16 November 1738 (Evan Morgan)Google Scholar. In the first twenty years of its publication (1729–1749), some twenty-one wholesalers and retailers advertised Madeira wine in The Pennsylvania Gazette on forty-eight separate occasions, but none were specialists.

24 The Pennsylvania Gazette, 13 September 1753, 26June 1755. See also 17 May, 21 August 1773, and 11 and 12 May (Bache's Wine Store), 23 November (Mitchell's Wine, Spirit, Rum & Sugar Store) 1774. Before 1775, there is no mention of a ‘wine shop’ (although that is surely what Grisley opened) or a ‘wine cellar’ as a retail establishment. Moreover, there is no one who advertises himself as a ‘wine merchant’ per se, although in March 1772 the German Ludwig Kuhn describes himself as a clerk who ‘would suit a wine merchant best, as in Europe he has been a considerable time in that trade, as well for himself as others, and consequently is a good judge of wines’. The Pennsylvania Gazette, 26 March 1772. Benjamin Morgan had advertise d his services as a wine cooper as early as 1729. Ibid., 4 March 1729. Similar specialisation occurred outside Philadelphia at roughly the same time. Further west, in Lancaster, for instance, the Scot James Burd, who ha d previously worked as a merchant in Philadelphia, was the first to open a ‘Wine Store’ in 1759, in partnership with his father-in-law Sr, Edward Shippen, Nixon, Lily L., James Burd: Frontier Defender, 1726–1793 (Philadelphia 1941) 127Google Scholar ; and Wood, Jerome H., Conestoga Crossroads (Harrisburg 1979) 98Google Scholar. Despite the push for specialisation, the combination of retail services persisted, especially in non-urban or undeveloped regions. See, for instance, The Pennsylvania Gazette, 31 May 1797.

25 Biddle, Clement, The Philadelphia Directory (Philadelphia 1791)Google Scholar ; and Anon., Census Directory for 1811 (Philadelphia 1811)Google Scholar. For similar growth in wine specialists in other American towns and cities, see Anon., The Boston Directory (Boston 1789)Google Scholar ; Cotton, Edward, The Boston Directory (Boston 1807)Google Scholar ; Duncan, William, The New York Directory and Register, for the Year 1792 (New York 1792)Google Scholar ; Longworth's American Almanac, New-York Register, and City Directory (New York 1807)Google Scholar ; Elizer, Eleazer, A Directory for 1803 (Charleston 1803)Google Scholar.

26 For examples of and the need for closer study of ‘variety, contingency and choice’ and interactive ‘multi-front encounters’ in the study of American slavery, the North American west, and American industrialisation, see Berlin, Ira, Many Thousands Gone: The First Two Centuries of Slavery in North America (Cambridge 1998) 113Google Scholar ; Limerick, Patricia, ‘Has “Minority” History Transformed the Historical Discourse?’, Perspectives 35 (November 1997) 1, 3236Google Scholar ; Brown, John, The Baldwin Locomotive Works, 1831–1815: A Study in American Industrial Practice (Baltimore 1995)Google Scholar.

27 The subject of the trans-Atlantic tobacco trade is synonymous with the name of Price, Jacob. The best detailed introduction to the material can be found in his ‘The Rise of Glasgow in the Chesapeake Tobacco Trade, 1707–1775’, William and Mary Quarterly, third series, 11 (1954) 179199CrossRefGoogle Scholar ; The Tobacco Adventure to Russia: Enterprise, Politics, and Diplomacy in the Quest for a Northern Market for English Colonial Tobacco, 1676–1722 (Philadelphia 1961)Google Scholar ; The Economic Growth of the Chesapeake and the European Market, 1697–1775’, Journal of Economic History 24 (1964) 496511CrossRefGoogle Scholar ; France and the Chesapeake: A History of the French Tobacco Monopoly, 1674–1791, and of Its Relationship to the British and American Tobacco Trades (Ann Arbor 1973)Google Scholar. On the sugar trade, see Pares, Richard, ‘The London Sugar Market, 1740–1769’, Economic History Review, second series, 9 (1956) 254270Google Scholar, and ‘A London West India Merchant House’ in: Pares, Richard and Taylor, A.J. eds, Essays Presented to Sir Lewis Namier (London 1956) 75107Google Scholar ; and McCusker, John J., ‘The Rum Trade and the Balance of Payments of the Thirteen Continental Colonies, 1750–1775’ (PhD thesis University of Pittsburgh, 1970)Google Scholar.

28 The export of European manufactures to the Americas has been minimally studied. A few exceptions, pointing u p the need for a different explanatory perspective, include Smail, John, Merchants, Markets & Manufactures: The English Wool Textile Industry in the Eighteenth Century (London 1999) chapter 5CrossRefGoogle Scholar ; Hood, Adrienne, ‘Organization and Extent of Textile Manufacture in Eighteenth-Century Rural Pennsylvania: A Case Study of Chester County’ (PhD thesis University of California, San Diego, 1988)Google Scholar ; Heaton, Herbert, ‘Yorkshire Cloth Traders in the United States, 1770–1840’, Publications of the Thoresby Society 37 (1944) 225287Google Scholar ; Ormrod, David, English Grain Exports and the Structure of Agrarian Capitalism, 1700–1760 (Hull 1985)Google Scholar ; Mathias, Peter, The Brewing Industry in England, 1700–1830 (Cambridge 1959)Google Scholar ; Multhauf, Robert P., Neptune's Gift: A History of Common Salt (Baltimore 1978)Google Scholar ; Duncan, T. Bentley, Atlantic Islands (Chicago 1972)Google Scholar ; Beechertjr, Edward D., ‘The Wine Trade of the Thirteen Colonies’ (MA thesis University of California, Berkeley 1949)Google Scholar. There are no good studies of the export of ceramics or glassware. Exports from the Americas are better researched, although much work remains to be done. See, for instance, Schneider, Jurgen, ‘The Effects of European Markets on Overseas Agriculture: The Production, Trade and Consumption of Coffee’ in: Pardo, J. Casas ed., Economic Effects of the European Expansion (Stuttgart 1992) 284302Google Scholar ; Coclanis, Peter A., The Shadow of a Dream (New York 1989)Google Scholar ; Dethloff, Henry C., ‘The Colonial Rice Trade’, Agricultural History 56 (1982) 231243Google Scholar ; Saladino, Gaspar, ‘The Maryland and Virginia Wheat Trade from Its Beginnings to the American Revolution’ (MA thesis University of Wisconsin, 1960)Google Scholar ; Innis, Harold A., The Cod Fisheries: The History of an International Economy (revised edition, Toronto 1954)Google Scholar ; Innis, , The Fur Trade in Canada (revised edition, Toronto 1956)Google Scholar ; Roberts, William I. III, ‘The Fur Trade of New England in the Seventeenth Century’ (PhD thesis University of Pennsylvania, 1958)Google Scholar ; Norton, Thomas E., The Fur Trade in Colonial New York, 1686–1776 (Madison 1958)Google Scholar.