@article{oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:02005438, author = {和田, 光弘 and Wada, Mitsuhiro}, journal = {名古屋大学人文学研究論集, The Journal of Humanities, Nagoya University}, month = {Mar}, note = {This article’s main contribution is bringing to light some never-before-seen documents written at the end of the 18th century and now owned by the author privately. The newly found manuscript documents pertain to John Choate (1737–1791), who was a local worthy in Ipswich, Massachusetts, and yet an obscure individual from historical perspective. The documents, therefore, have never been filed as a part of the Choate Family Papers in the Phillips Library at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts though they have a lot of information about a “common” people’s micro world connected with a macro market. At first, in this article (part 2), we decipher the handwriting with full of abbreviations on several pages of the manuscript documents and produce the printed text of some part of the manuscript with their photos. By analyzing his consumption goods and production goods listed in the text, we unraveled the world of John Choate, and utilizing statistical technique such as a regression analysis, revealed a sort of rules (two rules plus one corollary, actually) concerning the system of entry order of our account documents, that could be applicable to other contemporary parallel documents., 史料4、史料5は都合により掲載しておりません。}, pages = {275--288}, title = {建国期マサチューセッツの地方名士ジョン・チョートに関する新史料についての一考察(その2)}, volume = {6}, year = {2023} }