BOOK I, THE FOUNDERS OF THE SLOANE SIR WILLIAM AND HIS PURSUITS. will that not less than one half should be laid out in the purchase of lands in England, to be settled on the eldest son that should be born of the marriage. By the time of his attaining the age of five and thirty William COURTEN had already become-for that perioda great capitalist. He then, in 1606, established in London MERCANTILE a commercial house which added to the ordinary business of merchants on the largest scale, that of marine insurers, and also that of adventurers in the whale fishery. His partners in the firm were his younger brother, Peter COURTEN, and John MOUNCEY. One half of the joint stock belonged to the founder; the other half was divided between the junior partners. Domestic Corresp., James 1, vol. cix, 90; 96; vol. cx, 486; vol. cxi, Signs vol. xii, 26. For nearly a quarter of a century this mercantile partnership prospered marvellously. Its annual returns are said to have averaged £200,000. It built more than twenty large ships, and kept in constant employment more than four hundred seamen and fishermen. The head of the firm gradually acquired a large landed property which included estates in the several counties of Worcester, Gloucester, Leicester, Nottingham, Essex, and Kent. This great prosperity had, of course, its drawbacks. Amongst the earliest checks which are recorded to have befallen it was a Crown prosecution of COURTEN (in company with several other foreign merchants of note, among whom occur the names of BURLAMACHI, VANLORE, and DE QUESTER) on the frequent charge—so obnoxious to the political economy of that age--of the unlawful exportation of gold.' COURTEN was brought into the Star Chamber and was fined £20,000; a sum so enormous as to excite a suspicion of the accuracy of the record, but for its repeated entry. The prosecution was instituted in June, 1619; the defendant's discharge bears date July, 1620. But it may airly be assumed that only a portion of the nominal fine BOOK 1, vas really exacted. Chap. VI. MUSEUM. COLONIAL PRISES OF Another and much more serious check to the prosperity f the enterprising merchant came from his embarking in SLOANE he grand but hazardous work of planting colonies. In 1626, William COURTEN-then Sir William, having 1626. eceived the honour of knighthood at Greenwich, on the ENTER1st of May, 1622—petitioned the King for 'licence to make SIR WM. iscoveries and plant colonies in that southern part of the orld called Terra Australis incognita, with which the Domestic ing's subjects have as yet no trade,' and his petition anted. What ensued thereupon is thus told in an thoritative manuscript account preserved in the Sloane llection : was Sir William COURTEN being informed, by his correspondits in Zealand, that some Dutch men-of-war sent out Don private commission against the Spaniards had put to the island of Barbados, and found it uninhabited, and ry fit for a plantation, did thereupon, at his own charge, forth two ships provided with men, ammunition, and ns, and all kinds of necessaries for planting and fortifying e country, who landed and entered into possession of the ne in the month of February, 1626 [1627, N.S].. Afterrds, in the same year, he sent Captain POWELL thither, h a further supply of servants and provisions, who, in 27, fetched several Indians from the mainland, with ers sorts of seeds and roots, and agreed with them to ruct the English in planting cotton, tobacco, indigo, &c. William COURTEN having, by his partners and serts, maintained the actual possession for the space of years, and peopled the island with English, Indians, others, to the number of eighteen hundred and fifty I, women, and children, thought fit to make use of the COURTEN. Corresp., Charles I, vol. xiv, § 33. Book I, THE OF THE SLOANE Earl of PEMBROKE's name in obtaining a patent particularly for Barbadoes, although he had before a general grant from the king to possess any land within a certain latitude, wherein this island was comprehended. His Majesty having thus granted, by his Letters Patent, dated 25 February, 1627 [1628, N.S.] the government of this island unto the Earl of PEMBROKE, in trust for Sir William COURTEN, with power to settle a colony according to the laws of England, Captain PowELL had a commission to continue there as Governor, in their behalf. The Earl of Carlisle,' continues the MS. narrative, 'having, before this Patent to the Earl of PEMBROKE, procured a grant, dated 2nd July 1627, of all those islands lying within 10 and 20 degrees of latitude by the name of Carliola, or Carlisle Province, with all royalties, and jurisdictions, as amply as they were enjoyed by any Bishop of Durham, within his bishopric or county palatine, and having also got another patent, for the greater security of his title, dated 7th April 1628, sent one Heury HAWLEY with two ships, who, arriving there in 1629, invited the Governor on board, kept him prisoner, seized the Ibid. Comp. forts, and carried away the factors and servants of Sir Despatches in William COURTEN and the Earl of PEMBROKE. The authority of the Earl of CARLISLE being thus established was maintained.' Colonial Correspond ence, vol. v, §§ 1, 9, 13, 101, seqq. But it was only maintained after a long contest at the Council Board at home, which contest seems to have been largely influenced by the fluctuations of Court favour from time to time. A despatch in February, written in behalf of CARLISLE, is followed in April by another despatch written in behalf of PEMBROKE and COURTEN. The one fact that becomes consistently evident throughout the proceedings is that grants of this kind were made in the loosest fashion, and often in entire ignorance even of the geographical Indeed, the Book I, Chap. VI. FOUNDERS OF THE MUSEUM. ositions of the countries given by them.* ommon course of procedure under the STUARTS, when a THE ourtier had the happy thought of begging a territory in merica, reminds one of those earlier days of the TUDORS, SLOANE hen a favoured suppliant sometimes obtained the grant a monastery, or the lease of a broad episcopal estate, ith hardly more trouble than it cost him to win a royal nile. To COURTEN and his colonists the issue of this quarrel out Barbadoes was very disastrous. To some of the ter it brought ruin. But to the founder himself a check enterprise in one direction seems to have brought ineased stimulus to new enterprise in another direction. e now embarked largely in adventures to the East Indies d to China. As usual, they were planned on a magnifit scale; excited great jealousy in the breasts of comand were attended, in the long run, with very xed results of good and ill. titors; Meanwhile, Sir William's growing wealth-greatly exgerated by popular renown-and the conspicuous posiinto which his varied pursuits had brought him, led to ns of enterprise by others, and of quite another kind, at ne. He had lost his first wife, and also his eldest son. had married a second wife,-Hester TRYON, daughter Peter TRYON. Only one son survived, but Sir William three daughters, whose prospective charms attracted Thus, for example, at one stage of the proceedings before the Privy 13. ...... Book I, THE OP THE ALLIANCES THE CITY James I to Dom. Corr., vol. clxxii, § 71. many suitors. In September, 1624, King JAMES wrote a characteristic letter in which he assured COURTEN that the son of Sir Robert FLEETWOOD, Lord of the Scottish barony of Newton, would make a fit match for one of the three daughters, and that the conclusion of such a match would be very acceptable to the King himself. The pretendant would gladly, and impartially, wed any one of the three ladies, but the King himself, continues the royal letter, 'will regard, as a favour, any increase of portion given to the daughter whom FLEETWOOD may marry, over and above the portion given to, or intended for, the other daughters.' But despite so powerful a recommendation the young Baron of NEWTON failed in his suit. Among the aspirants with whom he stood in competition were men much higher in social position. Eventually, the eldest daughter married Sir Edward LYTTELTON of Staffordshire. The second daughter married Henry GREY, eighth Earl of Kent, of that family. And the third married Sir Richard KNIGHTLEY of Fawsley. Royal commendations of suitors were sure, in that age, not to be the only sample of royal letters-direct and indirect—with which a man in Sir William COURTEN's position became familiar. He was favoured with not a few solicitations for advances of money on privy-seals, and in other forms of loan.' Sometimes he complies. Sometimes he remonstrates by specifying the large sums he contributes to the revenue in the way of custom's duties, and the entire incapability thence arising of the desired privy-seals and the like documents. His loans, however, to JAMES, and to CHARLES, amounted to no less a sum than COMMERCIAL £27,000. COMPLICATIONS IN HOLLAND. response to The death in 1625 of his brother, Sir Peter COURTEN, |