Page:Economic History of Virginia Vol 1.djvu/529

 twelve pounds and ten shillings. The early shareholders subscribed with the understanding that they were to receive a certain proportion of the profits of the joint stock, and of the lands when the time for distribution arrived. It was intended originally that this should be in 1616, when it was anticipated that the population would have increased and the settlements have been extended very much. The first division was to apply only to the soil in the valley of the Powhatan, and in the vicinity of the recently established towns. Commissioners were to be dispatched to the Colony with instructions to make a survey, which was to be the basis of a map showing the allotments of every shareholder who had given in his name previous to the departure of these officers from England, and new adventurers were to be permitted to enjoy the same privilege as the old in having an interest in the dividends. Each portion of land thus set apart was to be transferred as an estate of inheritance. The holder of a single share was to be entitled to one hundred acres in the first division of the soil and one hundred acres additional in the second division, when he had seated the first plantation. The arbitrary conduct of Argoll, whose