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British Mercantile Trade Statistics, 1662–1809

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Authored by Dr Catherine Bateson
Published on 5th May, 2025 3 min read

Document of the Week: Tobacco and the American Colonies, 1719–1720 Document of the Week

A page from the Customs Imports and Exports accounts, covering the period December 1719 to December 1720.

Our latest “Document of the Week” was chosen by our Academic Liaison Manger, Dr Catherine Bateson. It is a page from British Customs imports and exports accounts, covering the period December 1719 to December 1720.

With an estimated value of £221,181.15s.10d., just one shipment of tobacco from the American colonies of Virginia and Maryland around 1719–1720 could generate a fortune for all those involved in the selling, importation, and buying process of this key trans-Atlantic commodity. In today’s money, the tobacco listed on this particular selected Customs House ledger page would be in excess of £25 million—a truly staggering amount for a small crop that had driven the burgeoning North American economy of the Chesapeake region and its colonial settlers. This image comes from one early eighteenth-century import list, just over one hundred years since English trading companies and settlers took over the land. Alongside the tobacco, this shipment to London contained useful supplies of tallow and wax, several quantities of beer, fortified wine and rum, and supplies of wood, including that from American redwood trees. More exotic New World items were also onboard, such as cocoa nuts (for making chocolate) and tortoise shells worth £21.15s. Animal skins were likewise exported, including elk, muskrat, racoon, and deer fur, which was the second most valuable commodity after the tobacco, though at a comparatively low £2,264. 

While these Customs ledgers show the importance of trade and commodity purchases, and their relative value to the economies of London traders and colonial sellers, one crucial aspect of this period’s imports and exports process is hidden. Tobacco was the cash crop of colonial Virginia and Maryland; it was not only traded, sold, and smoked, but even used as a currency with indigenous traders in exchange for other items (such as the animal fur and beads). Yet by the 17-teens, this Atlantic World commodity was almost exclusively picked by enslaved African hands who would never see any of that vast monetary figure trickle down for their labour. Behind the vast figure of over £221,000 are the lives of those on the Virginian plantations and farms where the tobacco originated from—these ledgers show the economic output of enslaved labour. 

It is also worth noting that the bottom of the image details imports on the same ship from the “West Indies in general”, including £187.10s worth of indigo plant. Within twenty years of this shipment to London, another American colonial region—notably South Carolina—would turn indigo into its cash crop on a comparable level domestically with tobacco. This too was cultivated through the knowledge and labour of African and Caribbean enslaved peoples. Therefore, while these Customs statistics and commodity lists reveal day-to-day colonial trade to Britain, they also trace slavery’s growth as part of that economic development, and the monetary injustice the system profited from. 

Where to find this document

This page comes from our primary source collection, British Mercantile Trade Statistics, 1662–1809. Consisting of over 47,000 images, it contains documents from The National Archives (UK) relating to British trade and shipping through naval and mercantile routes over almost 150 years. The collection includes importation and Customs ledgers showing supply routes and statistics that trace the growth of British and global commerce, particularly in the British Atlantic World and early decades of the British empire. Visit the collection page to learn more.


Authored by Dr Catherine Bateson

Dr Catherine Bateson

Dr Catherine Bateson is a historian of the USA, specialising in nineteenth century culture and society, the American Civil War, and Reconstruction. She has published about Irish American Civil War songs, music, and immigrant experiences during the conflict. A former graduate of UCL, KCL, and UPenn, she earned her PhD from Edinburgh in 2018 and has lectured on all aspects of American History and Studies at the universities of Edinburgh, Durham, Kent, Yale in London, Sussex, Gloucestershire, and Wolverhampton. She is also the co-founder of the Stuff of War Society and holds various committee positions on American, British, and Irish Studies scholarly boards in the UK. Dr Bateson works as BOA's Academic Liaison Manager, where she engages with libraries, faculties, and students on emerging trends in historical studies and primary source learning.

Read all posts by Dr Catherine Bateson.

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A painting showing West Indiamen alongside Bristol docks on the Avon. The ship in the foreground on the left is being unloaded with timber from America. Some of the unloaded timber floats on the water. A man can be seen standing on a pile of floating planks as one of them is being lowered down from the ship. A figure leans over the stern to manage the process. The ship may be having her mast stepped. There is another pile of wooden planks floating on the starboard side of the ship. Two men in a rowing boat are using a pole and hook to catch a smaller pile of planks floating in the foreground on the right. The barge on the right is a Severn trow which conveyed a lot of cargo up and down the river, and, as in this painting, would have brought iron down the Severn.

Licensed to access Bristol Shipping Records: Imports and Exports, 1770–1917

1770   1917
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Licensed to access Liverpool Shipping Records: Imports and Exports, 1820–1900

1820   1860
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Two ships sail on very choppy waters. One ship is closer to the foreground, while one is in the background, sailing into the light.

Licensed to access Power and Profit: British Colonial Trade in America and the Caribbean, 1678–1825

1678   1825
Public Record Office (London) (c/o The National Archives) logo
A well-dressed plantation owner and family visiting the slave quarters in Virginia

Licensed to access Scottish Trade with Africa and the West Indies in the Early 18th century, 1694–1709

1694   1709
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