2 Francis Bamford, ed., A Royalist’s Notebook: The Commonplace Book of Sir John Oglander, Kt [1585-1655] (London, 1931), 109; on economic losses of Royalist families, who mostly suffered and survived, see H. J. Habbakuk, “Landowners and the Civil War,” ECHR2 18 (1965), 130-51; Ann Hughes, Politics, Society and the Civil War in Warwickshire (Cambridge, 1987), 267; and many writings by Joan Thirsk, beginning with “The Sales of Delinquent Estates during the Interregnum and the Land Settlement at the Restoration” (thesis, Univ. of London, 1950).
3 Henry Cary, ed., Memorials of the Great Civil War (London, 1842), II, 118; quoted in David Underdown, Royalist Conspiracy in England, 1649-1660 (New Haven, 1960), 13-14.
4“Ingram’s Proceedings” [n.d., ca. 1676]; Peter Force, ed. Tracts and Other Papers Relating Principally to the Origin, Settlement and Progress of the Colonies in North America … (4 vols., 1836-46, New York, 1947), 1.11, 34.