Plymouth Company
Plymouth Company | |
Type | Division of the Virginia Company |
Industry | Maritime transport, trade |
Founded | (10 April 1606Westminster, England | ) at
Founder | James I |
Defunct | 24 May 1624 |
Fate | Dissolved |
Headquarters | , England |
Area served | New England |
Products | Cash crops, timber |
The Plymouth Company, officially known as the Plymouth Company of London, was a division of the Virginia Company with responsibility for colonizing the east coast of America between latitudes 38° and 45° N.[1]
History[]
The merchants agreed to finance the settlers’ trip in return for repayment of their expenses plus interest out of the profits made.[2] In 1620, after years of disuse, the company was revived and reorganized as the Plymouth Council for New England. With a new charter, the New England Charter of 1620.[3] The Plymouth Company had 40 patentees at that point, and established the Council for New England to oversee their efforts, but it stopped operating in 1624; that was when these former plantations were dissolved and became Royal Colonies.[4]
References[]
- ^ John Patterson Davis (1905), Corporations: A Study of the Origin and Development of Great Business Combinations and of Their Relation to the Authority of the State, NY: G. P. Putnam's Sons, OCLC 82100178, OL 23545424M
- ^ ""First Charter of the Virginia Company of London,1606".
- ^ "New England Charter of 1620".
- ^ "Virginia Trading company".
- 1606 establishments in England
- 1624 disestablishments in England
- English colonization of the Americas
- History of New England
- Virginia Company