Introduction > Name Index > Place Index > Hull, Yorkshire to James River Virginia Connections

Hull,Yorkshire to James River, Virginia Connections

Virginia Gazette 1746
Oct 5 Snow Nottingham, James Chapman, for Hull, with 72 hogsheads of tobacco, 834 barrels of tar, 199 barrels of turpentine, 44 bundles of raw deer skins, 46 walnut stocks and planks, 4500 tresnels, and 8150 staves.

Entered Inwards in the Lower district of James River.
Nov 20 Union, William Robinson, from Hull with European Goods.

Virginia Gazette 1752
Sept 14 Schooner Speedwell, William Archer, from Bermuds wtih 13 casks of sugar & 4 barrels of coffee.
Sept 23 Ship York, Christopher Roper, for Hull with 95 hhds of Tob. 1676 barrels fo tar, 603 barrels of turpentine & 11,793 staves.

Virginia Gazette 1752
Cleared Outwards
Nov 20. Speedwell, Wiliam Williams for Antigua, with 100 barrels of beef, 20 ditto pork, 58,000 shingles, 500 bushels of corn & 29 ditto pease.
Nov 25 Adventure, William Gunhouse, for Hull, with 71 barrels of pitch, 379 ditto turpentine, 930 ditto tar, 2 ditto snake-root, 1 bundle containing 51 deerskins, 15 walnut planks, 10 walnut logs, 6900 staves, 2 pieces of woollen cloth returned.

Virginia Gazette 1752
Nov. 13 Industry, Samuel Gould, for Hull, with 65 hhds of tobacco, 3 barrels of pitch, 805 ditto tar, 401 ditto turpentine, 8920 staves, 114 feet of walnut, 1 hhd & 1 barrel of snake root.

Virginia Gazette 1755
September 5. Croule, James Chapman for Hull with 155 hhds tobacco, 352 barrels turpentine, 1106 ditto tar, 11400 staves & 8 pieces of walnut.

Virginia Gazette 1767
August 1 Jenny, Thomas Blagdon, for Hull with 126 hhds of tobacco, 200 barrels of pitch, 496 barrels of tar, 100 barrels of turpentine, 12,400 staves, 2 pipes of wine, and 6415 lb of hemp.

Virginia Gazetter 1768
July 4 Prince George, John Fawn, for Hull, with 120 hhds of tobacco 1769 bushels of corn, 2 hhds of skins and 6000 staves.

Virginia Gazette 1774
YORK(shire). March 8. Last Saturday sailed from Hull for Fort Cumberland in Nova Scotia, the Two Friends, Watt, with iron ware, linen and wollen drapery, household furniture and 99 emigrants, chiefly from the northern part of this country.

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