A. D. 1800. 



545 



S . CROIX. 



Sugar ; cotton ; some fustic and lignum vitae. | 



S\ DOMINGO. 



Sugar ; fustic ; logwood ; mahogany ; hides. | 



s'. MAKTIN. 



Salt. I 



Nothing. 



Nothing. 



Nothing. 



S . THOMAS 



Sugar ; coffee ; cacao ; cotton ; indigo ; 

 anotto ; logwood ; fustic ; nicaragua 

 wood ; mahogany ; some hides ; turtle- 

 shell. 



Mahogany ; some logwood ; 

 a little fustic ; a little cedar ; 

 a small quantity of turtle- 

 shell. 



Indigo ; cotton ; train oil ; 

 spermaceti oil; whale-bone; 

 skins of seals and sea eleph- 

 ants ; hides ; Indian peltry. 



The sea-otter furs, the 

 only article of trade in 

 this country, are all car- 

 ried to China. 



Books ; canes ; drugs, gums, and oils of 

 a great variety of kinds ; indigo in 

 large quantities ; cochineal ; China ink ; 

 galls; turmeric; seed-lack; shell-lack; 

 stick lack ; ivory; fans: cane mats 

 cinnamon ; cloves ; mace ; nutmeg ; 

 pepper ; cayenne pepper ; ginger ; sago ; 

 sugar ; tea ; a little rice ; coffee ; 

 preserved fruits ; mother-of-pearl shell, 

 and spoons made of it ; cowries ; 

 carnelian stones for seals ; saltpetre : 

 arrack ; cotton ; cotton yarn • Carm- 

 ania, and goats', wool ; raw silk of 

 Bengal and China ; calicoes and mus- 

 lins of great variety of kinds ; great 

 variety of piece goods destined for ex- 

 portation, the consumption of them in 



British merchandize; as to the British 

 islands. 



Some cinnamon and pepper ; a few Ger- 

 man, and Irish, linens ; some wine. 



BAY OF HONDURAS. 



A few of the articles usually carried to the West- 

 Indies. 



Some Irish linens ; heef ; pork ; rum ; wine ; all in 

 small quantities. 



FLORIDA*. 



Some wrought iron ; a few woolen goods, chiefly flan- 

 nels ; linens, chiefly low-priced cotton goods. 

 German linens ; Irish bounty linens ; a few India 

 piece goods. 



NOOTKA. 



Some woolen, and cotton, goods : linens ; hats ; earthen 

 ware ; glass ; wrought iron ; watches. 

 Coffee ; sugar ; tea ; bar iron ; cambrics ; muslins ; 

 tobacco ; rum ; wine ; all in small quantities. 



ASIA, or EAST INDIA and CHINA. 



Apothecary's ware; books, value^l4, 836; 

 pictures, and prints ; stationary: wrought, 

 and unwrought, iron, steel, lead, and tin ; 

 wrought brass, copper, pewter, and silver ; 

 tin-plate ware ; brass, and iron, cannon, and 

 other military stores ; coals : earthen ware ; 

 glass ; painters' colours, oils, varnish, &c. 

 cordage : sail-cloth : ship chandlery of all 

 kinds to a large amount, many vessels being 

 built in India; leather, tanned, and wrought; 

 provisions, beer; woolen goods; silk goods; 

 linens ; some cotton goods : 8,000 yards 

 of British muslins ; wearing apparel ; hats ; 

 haberdashery . coaches, chaises, &c ; wax, 

 md tallow, candles. 

 'ortex peruvianus, ginseng, and other drugs; 



* Ever fince the peace of 1783 a few lioufes in 

 London have carried on a trade with Florida 

 by fending Britifh veflels under licences obtained 

 from the Bricifh and Spanilh governments : and 



Vol. IV. 



a few groceries ; cochineal ; a little coral ; 



the war has not interrupted the trade. The cotton 

 of that country ic of the quality of the Upland cot- 

 ton of Georgia, but much inferior to the Sea-ifland 

 cotton of that flatc. 



3Z 



