53^ 



A. D. 1800. 



Pearl-ashes, weed - ashes ; 

 spruce beer, 1,054 barrels; 

 v-lieat, barley, oats, peas, 

 beans, rye ; flax ; hemp ; 

 madder; bristles; mill-stones; 

 wool ; hides ; goose quills ; 

 lintseed ; some skins; cheese; 

 timber, boards, staves, &c. 



PRUSSIA, 



Alum; wearing apparel; beer; wrought brass and 

 iron ; coals ; copperas ; grindstones ; lead ; tin ; tin- 

 ned plates ; painters' colours ; woolen, and cotton, 

 goods ; earthen ware ; glass ; salt ; some refined 

 sugar ; melasses ; train oil ; some cotton yarn. 

 Drugs ; indigo, fustic, logicood, and other dye-stuffs ; 

 pepper, pimento, and other spices ; coffee ; sugar ; 

 rum ; tobacco ; oil ; India goods ; French icine. 



GERMANY. 



Alum ;, wearing apparel; bark; beer; books and 

 stationary; wrought brass, copper, and iron ; silver 

 plate, and plated ware ; lead ; pew ter ; tin ; tinned 

 platesf; salt; coals; earthen ware; glass; paint- 

 ers' colours; copperas; oil of vitriol ; sal ammoni- 

 ac, and other drugs ; train oil ; whale-bone ; her- 

 rings, red and white ; cod ; oysters ; refined sugar; 

 melasses ; tanned leather ; wrought leather; gloves; 

 haberdashery ; hats ; cotton goods to a large a- 

 mount ; woolen goods ; silk goods ; cotton yarn, 

 value ^305,945 ; watches; musical instruments; 

 cabinet ware; coaches; horses. 

 Mother of pearl ; walking canes; aloes, rhiiharb, 

 borax, camphire, cassia lignea, castoreurn, jalap, 

 and other drugs ; gum Senegal, and other gums ; 

 cochineal, indigo, annoito, brazil, fustic, logivood, 

 madder, and other dye-stuffs ; mahogany and other 

 I'Vcst-India uoods ; ivory ; cinnamon, cloves, pep- 

 per, ginger, and other spiceries ; cacao ; coffee ; 

 sugar; tea; sago; currants; turmeric; Indian 

 hides, ox, and cow hides ; skins of deer, otter, 

 bear, fox, mink, ivolf, and almost all other kinds ; 

 hor}is ; lintseed oil, and other oils ; rum ; brandy ; 

 arrack ; French, Spanish, and other, wines ; tob- 

 acco ; tchale-bone ; cotton ; cotton yarn ; India 

 piece goods ; a few Irish linens. 



Oak bark ; books, maps, prints, 

 pictures*; brimstone; 3, J 05 

 wooden clocks ; cork ; wheat, 

 barley, Oats, peas, beans, rye, 

 rye meal, wheat flour; arsenick, 

 antimony, and other drugs ; 

 gums ; juniper berries ; oil of 

 turpentine; verdigris; copperas; 

 succus liquoritiae ; flax ; hemp ; 

 goats, ox, horse, hair ; human 

 hair, 2,378 lbs ; hides ; hops; 

 chip, and straw, hats ; linens, 

 cambrics, canvas, lawns, hol- 

 lands, tabling, &c ; rags, 3,002 

 tuns; some paper; waste paper to 

 be remanufactured; butter and 

 cheese : beef ; pork ; tongues ; 

 potatoes ; goose quills ; seeds ; 

 silk, raw, thrown, and waste ; 

 wool, Spanish, &c. ; bees wax ; 

 calf, bear, coney, goat, sheep, 

 and seal, skins; brandy,geneva, 

 and other spirits ; starch ; 

 Rhenish, Tokay, French, and 

 Spanish, wines ; cotton ; lin- 

 en yarn, above 3,000,000 lbs ; 

 timber, boards, &c. 



It is to be observed that much of the commerce of Germany is for account of the 

 nations involved in the war. 



HOLLAND. 



Oak bark ; books, maps, drawings, paint- 

 ings, prints; corn; juniper berries ; flax, 

 hemp ; madder ; flower roots and trees, 

 value ^^1,074; a few linens; butter; 

 cheese ; bacon ; potatoes ; seeds ; gen- 

 eva ; rags, Q] ,000 tuns. 



Copperas ; a few cotton goods ; some 

 woolen goods ; refined sugar ; train oil, 

 an article formerly imported from Hol- 

 land. 



Foreign merchandize ; nearly the same as 

 toGer many, but less than ha If the quantities. 



* Books, maps, piftures, &c. alfo come from the otlier countries of Europe, but in fmaller quan- 

 tities. 



f Tinned plates, now an article of export to every country, were imported from Germany about 

 fifty years ago. 



