Page:Economic History of Virginia Vol 1.djvu/293

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Virginia as well as from the Somers Isles, in 1622, disposing of their cargoes of tobacco in Holland, on which account the Privy Council instructed the officers in the two Colonies to impose a heavy fine upon the owners.[1]

The loss which would have fallen upon the royal revenue by a permanent diversion of even a part of the annual tobacco crop of Virginia to Holland, would have increased with the progress of time. In the letters patent of 1609, the King had granted to the London Company exemption, during twenty-one years, from every form of custom and subsidy in excess of five per cent upon such commodities and merchandise as were imported into England, but the grant of this privilege was altogether disregarded, and in a manner giving a marked advantage to the Spanish importers. The highest grades of the Spanish leaf were sold in London at the rate of eighteen shillings a pound, while the Virginian leaf, which, previous to 1620, had never brought more than five shillings in the highest grades, and which in 1621 sank to two shillings, maintained in the superior grades a general average of only three shillings.

  1. Order of the Privy Council, Colonial Entry Book, vol. 70, p. 203; Sainsbury Abstracts for 1622, p. 80, Va. State Library. It is interesting to find, as an evidence of the evasion of this injunction, that in a petition presented to the Privy Council in 1629, one Rossingham states that in 1622, 1623, and 1624 he was the agent of Sir George Yeardley in Holland in the sale of the latter’s tobacco. Colonial Papers, vol. V No. 15, I.