The Massachusetts Bay Company seems to have maintained a
"company store," in the modern phrase, at which the colonists might
obtain clothing, fabrics, foodstuffs and supplies of all sorts. When Governor
Endecott came over in 1628, the Company sent extra clothing sufficient for one
hundred men including three hundred suits of clothes, four hundred shirts and
four hundred pairs of shoes. Two hundred of the suits of clothes consisted of
doublet and hose made up of leather, lined with oiled skin leather, and
fastened with hooks and eyes. The other suits were made up of Hampshire
kerseys, the doublets lined with linen and the hose with skins.[6] There
were a hundred waistcoats of green cotton bound about with red tape, a hundred
Monmouth caps, at two shillings each, five hundred red knit caps, milled, at
five pence each, and one hundred black hats, lined in the brows with leather.
This store supplied the natural wear and tear of headgear among the hundred
men. The stock contained four hundred pairs of knit stockings, ten dozen pairs
of Norwich garters, three hundred plain falling bands, two hundred handkerchiefs
and a stock of sheer linen with which to made up other handkerchiefs. Scotch
ticking was supplied for beds and bolsters, with wool to put therein. The
blankets were of Welsh cotton and fifty rugs were sent over to place over the
blankets, while mats were supplied "to lye vnder 50 bedds aboard
shippe."[3]
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43970/43970-h/43970-h.htm
Beware that "cotton" in this period covered all spun thread and that Welsh Cotton and Cotswolds Cotton were usually wool.
Reference is Hopkins, The Tale of a Soldier's Coat, Stuart Press, 2000
Cheers,
Wayne
Beware that "cotton" in this period covered all spun thread and that Welsh Cotton and Cotswolds Cotton were usually wool.
Reference is Hopkins, The Tale of a Soldier's Coat, Stuart Press, 2000
Cheers,
Wayne
Beware that "cotton" in this period covered all spun thread and that Welsh Cotton and Cotswolds Cotton were usually wool.
ReplyDeleteReference is Hopkins, The Tale of a Soldier's Coat, Stuart Press, 2000
Cheers,
Wayne
Many thanks Wayne, I have added your info to the post.
ReplyDeleteRegards, Keith.