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to carry the said goods soe laded at Cadiz … to carry the said goods soe laded at Cadiz which were laded by the said Wilmot for the said account<br />
for account of himselfe, Simon delbo and Company alsoe English Merchants<br />
for which there was a Charter partie passed betweene the said Captaine<br />
Morales and the said Wilmot, and at Cartagena hee saith there were<br />
about an hundred and fiftie bales of the said English marchants said goods<br />
to be delivered, and this deponent was imployed to goe along to sea to<br />
the transport and deliverie of the lading, and accordingly saw the<br />
delivery of the said number of bales of goods at Cartagena, unto John<br />
Cuello factor for the said English merchants, which Cuello went<br />
along therewith in the shipp and went ashore with the said goods soe<br />
delivered at Cartagena, where hee was to dispose of them, and<br />
for the rest of the said shipps lading the sugar was thence carried to the<br />
havanna and there disposed of by the said Captaine Morales being<br />
thereto imployed and to whose disposall they were consigned, like as those<br />
delivered at Cartagena were consigned to the disposall of the said Cuello<br />
who hee saith is a Spaniard of Saint Lucars, and subiect of the said king,<br />
And further deposeth not.
To the third Interrogatorie hee saith the said shipp last before shee<br />
was seized came from the havana in the Iland of Cuba, and that<br />
the name of the frigot that tooke her was the ''Nightingale'' commanded<br />
by Captaine Lightfoote, and that the lading (that was aboard her at the time of<br />
the said seizure) was taken into her at the havana aforesaid, And were<br />
as followeth videlicet two thousand three hundred and fourtie kintalls<br />
of Campecha wood, which hee saith was laded for and was to be delivered<br />
at Teneriff in the Canaries for the account of the said Wilmot, delbo<br />
and Company English merchants aforesaid freighters aforesaid, One<br />
thousand five hundred raw hides, of which hides there<br />
were five hundred and sixtie or thereabouts and alsoe six chests of sugar laded at<br />
havana by Miguel da ffaguagua for account of don Lewes Perez da<br />
Vittoria subiect of the said king and dwelling in the said Iland of Teneriife<br />
where they were to be delivered to him or his use. And<br />
saith the other five hundred of the said hides were laded by<br />
[?Ivan] Britton at havana, which Britton is a Portuguese and lived<br />
in the Indies, and came thence with his said goods for Teneriff<br />
where hee was to receive them. Two hundred and fiftie more of the<br />
rest of the said hides, were as hee saith laded at havana by Antonio<br />
Veloso tthere dwelling and being subiect of the said king, and consigned<br />
to be delivered to Simon Riverzo Inhabitant in Teneriff, alsoe<br />
subiect of the said king and native of the Canaries, but for<br />
whose account hee knoweth not, and for the remainder of the said hides<br />
hee saith they were laded by the said Captaine Morales for account<br />
of ffrancis Pepyn a ffrenchman of Saint Malo's, but to be delivered at<br />
Teneriff by his order. And further shee had then aboard foure<br />
and twenty baggs of the drugg called Halappa or Jallop which were<br />
laded by don ffernando Attalia Mendia a Spaniard and subiect of<br />
the said kinge and the same were at Teneriff to be delivered to the<br />
said don ffernando for his owne account. And over and besides the<br />
foresaid six chests, which were for account as aforesaid, there were in her<br />
seaventie five chests of sugar were laded as hee saith by the said<br />
Captaine Morales, for account of the person or persons mentioned<br />
in the said Captaines owne memorialls which account hee saith is unknowne to him<br />
this saith is unknowne to him<br />
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