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eteenth century, together with the abolition of some of the restrictions on commerce and industry, promoted an era of prosperity the like of which the inhabitants had never before known, and the natural consequence was increase in numbers. "In those days," says Colonel Flinter, "if some perfect stranger had dropped from the clouds as it were, on this island, naked, without any other auxiliaries than health and strength, he might have married the next day and maintained a family without suffering more hardships or privations than fall to the lot of every laborer in the ordinary process of clearing and cultivating a piece of land." The earliest information on the subject was given by Alexander O'Reilly, the royal commissioner to the Antilles in 1765, who enumerates a list of 24 towns and settlements with a total population of _Free_ men, women, and children of all colors....39,846 Slaves of both sexes, including their children ........5,037 Total.................................................44,883 Abbad, in his "general statistics of the island," corresponding to the end of the year 1776, gives the details of the population in 30 "partidas," or ecclesiastical districts, as follows: Whites 29,263 Free colored people 33,808 Free blacks 2,803 Other free people ("agregados") 7,835 Slaves 6,537 ------ Total 80,246 That is to say, an increase of 7-311 per cent per annum during the eleven years elapsed since O'Reilly's computation, which was a period of constant apprehension of attacks by pirates and privateers. From 1782 to 1802 there were three censuses taken showing the following totals: In 1782 81,180 souls. " 1792 115,557 " " 1802 163,192 " From 1800 to 1815, there was universal poverty and depression in the island in consequence of the prohibitive system introduced by the Spanish authorities in all branches of commerce and industry, and the sudden failure of the annual remittances from Mexico in consequence of the insurrection. Still, the population had increased from 163,192 in 1802 to 220,892 in 1815. From this year forward a great improvement in the island's general condition set in, thanks to the efforts of Don Ramon Power, Puerto Ri
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