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Volume3 III., IV., V., VI., VII. and IX. of this work were published under the direction of the Governor, Secretary of State and Comptroller of the State of New York and the publication has been completed under the authority of the Regents of the University, in virtue of the Acts of ;

the Legislature to that

effect,

passed April 12, 1856, and April

2,

1858.

The Documents in Dutch and French were translated by E. B. O t Callaghan, M. D., LL. D., who was employed for that purpose to prepare the Index and to superintend the publication generally. ;

;

GENEBAL INDEX. Bonrdeaux, X., 05

ptain, arrives at Quebec from sent to cape Chat, 159

Aa,

Van

(See

der.

Van

der Aa.)

Aiinliaax, a Seneca chief,

Aaron, a

Aaron,

1

murdered,

Mohawk sachem,

a negro, gives false

III.,

to the

evidence is regard

Aasdom-reght, explanation of the Dutch law of I.,

d'Abadie de 619

burning

St.

Germain, Mr.,

assists

major Loftus, VII.,

America, X., 640; governor of Louisiana, litters of

M. de

St.

Ange

1157; his conference with the

to,

Indians, 1159, 1160; biographical notice of, 1161.

Abadiens, a religious

sect, in the city of

New York,

IX., 549.

[Abbot, George,] archbishop of Canterbury,

III., 1, 2, 4, 5,

Abbott, Mordecai, one of the proprietors of

Abdie,

sir

Albany, VII., 119, 343; proposes a Junction of the British troops with the Provincials, 122;

peace with the Delawares,

of, I., 557.

West

Jersey,

member

England,

of the council of trade,

III., 31.

389,

commands an 739;

295

appoints

;

master-general,

682

David, arrives at Albany from Canada, VI., 526; to effect

an exchange of prisoners, 527.

mayor

III.,

840, IV., 902, 903, 904, 911;

90; one of the principal inhabitants of Albany, 754 a merchant, 849 recorder of Albany, 984, 983 (fits), 985, 990,992,994, 995, 996, of Albany,

;

998

;

receives

Albany, 1097

;

money

;

for materials for

commissioner for Indian

Abeel, John, a prisoner in Canada, VI., 492

495

;

546

;

his release

demanded,

ibid

an Indian trader, VII.

Senecas, 172, 173.

,

;

101

;

the fort at

affairs,

V., 85.

kept in prison,

has a Seneca child, ;

;

his conduct approved, 344

947

X.,

returns from the

Highlanders

the 42d

;

of

;

Woodhull

under,

serves

Robertson

major

deputy

VIII.,

quarter-

colonel of the 44th foot,

706;

the correspondence between

Canada transmitted

X.,

him and the French 712, 771, 770,

to France, 711,

•877; his correspondence with governor de Vandreuil, defeated,

713, 714, 772, 830, 878, 879;

Abeel, James, captain of rangers, VIII., 603. Abeel, John, alderman,

ordered to

expedition against Tieonderoga, 228,

major

Abeel, Cornet, IV., 16.

empowered

164;

serve at lake George, under, VII., 786, VIII., 588;

Abeel, Catalina, marries Vincent Mathews, VIII., 449.

Abeel,

of,

recalled, 345; biographical notice of, ibid; returns

X.,

839.

Robert,

news of the cannon

sent to, 160;

fee.,

sent to Albany at the request

to

11, 12.

Abbots Boding, reverend Thomas Thurloe, rector

III.,

Ahercromby (Abber Kombick, Abercrombie, Albercrombie, Albercromhick, Albert Comhey, Alberkombick, Alberkomhiz, Alber Koni brick), major-general James, at

Livingston manor, 207

killed near fort Massachusetts, X., 177.

,

ber of the privy council, VI., 130. Abercrombie, James, captain in the 42d Highlanders, biographical notice of, VII., 160 major, X., 1105.

furnish a guard for the protection of property in

d'Abancour, Mary, IX., 668. Abbot,

;

return

;

d

620.

sends an account of the campaign of 1757 in

;

;

178.

,

Abemesnie, an Abenaki, gained over by the English, IX., 942. ibercorn (Albercorne) [James Hamilton 7tb] ''arl of, mem-

445.

VI., 295.

of the Gaspe, VIII., 390.

called,

recalled, 175

;

French speak favorably Schuyler

to negotiate

of,

741,

779;

747: authorizes colonel

an exchange of prisoners, 773;

corresponds with M. de Montcalm, 774, b22 number of Indians attached to his army, S02; examines a ;

French

officer sent to

him, ibid

;

force under his

com-

mand, 809 false report regarding, 817 loses his baggage and music, 818 at the head of a powerful army, 828 news of his defeat received in France, 833 his let;

;

;

;

;

ters to

governor Vaudreuil forwarded, 841

governor Vaudreuil's messenger,

847

;

;

detains

despatches

GENERAL INDEX.

2

— continued.

Abercronibie, major-general

from the French general and governor conveyed to, 851, 892 communicates the fall of Louisbourg to the French general, 853; at the head of lake George, burns tinretires into winter quarters, S84 855 ;

;

;

barracks and storehouses at lake George, 888.

Adam Gordon

enshire, lord

earl

member

of,

of the

reports

;

at the congress at

Albany, 870

;

his speech

declares the council

;

Albany extinguished, 871

fire at

held with

news from Canada,

brother of king Hendrick, 869, 998

;

;

Mo-

of the upper

hawk castle, 982 VII., 136; governor Shirley endeavors to detach him from general Johnson, VI., 998 ;

;

thanks

sir

William Johnson

joharie, VII., 53

of 1695,

&c,

for

having

fortified

Cana-

his speech to sir William Johnson,

;

announces the intention of the Mohawks

;

Beauhamois and Hocquart, 1014 hamois' despatches relative

;

;

sings the song of condolence at Onondaga, 134,

nadian despatches of 1746, 76 de la Gallissoniere, 132 of 1747,8, 179

and the war song, 143; expresses his determination William Johnson at the expense of his at-

;

his Indian

name, 137

Johnson, 232

Tryon

Guy

;

;

chief

speeches

of,

235, 239

for his speech, 309

park, 518

;

manager

;

;

for sir

William

thanks governor

attends a conference at

attends a conference with the com-

missioners from the continental congress, 607, 610 his speeches to them, 621, 630.

Abraham, junior

Mohawk

;

Abraham), a sachem of the lower 115 sets off on an expedi-

(Little

castle, VII.,

tion to Canada,

;

199

;

;

attends

a conference at fort

Johnson, 263, 265 complains of the injustice the Mohawks have experienced in regard to their lands, ;

435.

Abraham, Mr.,

(See Schuyler.)

tin-

plains of, general

II.,

89.

of M. de la Jonquiere's despatches,

of occurrences in

;

quesne, 423

;

Canada

in

despatches from fort Du-

of

from Canada of 1756, M. de Vaudreuil,

of despatches

;

of despatches, complaining of

;

of despatches

from Canada

in 1759, 906, 972

;

of a plan to excite a rebellion in Canada, 1155.

Abuses attendant on Netherland,

I.,

free

trade with the Indians in

scriptions, erected, ibid;

nor

of,

241

II.,

34S

of in-

;

to, X., 492.

122, 126, 127, 450 M. la Bourne, govermemorial on the part of the F]

III., ;

(See Collgc.)

of sciences, erected, ibid;

M. de Bougainville contributes Acadia (Acadie),

New

150.

Academy, none in New Netherland, I., 424. Academy, French, of architecture, founded,

;

ceming New York and, 506; Massachusetts encroaches on, ibid

;

chevalier Grandfontaine, governor

513,

of,

M. de Meneval, governor of, III., 571, IX., 428 pirates plunder several places in, III., 571; an 265

IX., 87,

;

of, X., 1003, 1010, 1038 the French defeated on, 1039,1052; whence called, 1081.

Abrahamzen,

;

Abramse, Cornelia, II., 578. Abramse, Jacob, II., 700.

the

;

;

sent to the Indians

of,

343

bec from, 350; Indians

the French obtain, 536

Abreverac, a vessel arrives at Quebec from, X., 124. Abstractof the remonstrance of New Netherland, I., 331

made by

out in Massachusetts against, 7(4;

;

of,

a Jesuit

arrives at

attack Hatfield, 403

QueM. ;

de Villebon, governor of, 426, IX., 240, 526, 570 French of, encroach on New England, IV., 453

Isaac, III., 74.

proposals

fitted

M. Perrot, governor of, 720, IX., 272; Mr. Nelson's memorial respecting, IV. 207 New York claims a part notice of the peace of, 282; abounds in copper, 311 ,

Wolfe on, VII., 357; the

English scale the heights

III.,

;

of M. de Vaudreuil's despatches from Ca-

;

expedition

captain, III., 117, 132. (See Slants.)

IV., 343.

the Fin, a deserter from Delaware,

Abraham,

from Canada

;

Abraham (Abram), Abraham

of despatches

;

;

of Ca-

;

of Canadian despatches of 1749, 199 from M. de Vaudreuil, governor of

1755 and 1756, 397;

857

;

;

nada, 381, 407, 518

475

tends the treaty at fort Stanwix, VIII., 113, 114, 119

Point, 1021

of despatches of M.

;

of correspondence between M. de la

;

Louisiana, 219; 240, 242

146

attends a conference at Lancaster, 255

of M. de Beau-

Galissoniere and others respecting an exchange of

to protect sir life,

;

Crown

to

of despatches concerning Louisbourg, X., 31

of despatches

;

;

;

prisoners, 190

to

;

115

from M. de Vaudreuil and father New England troubles

Oswego, 999 of letters of Messrs. de Beauhamois and d'Aigremont, 1010 of letters of Messrs. de

adopt

;

reference to the Iroquois,

in

Chasse on the subject

la

some River Indians, 96 accompanies a party of Mohawks to fort Johnson, 104 dissuades sir William Johnson from going to Onondaga, 107 advises sir William Johnson to attend the meeting at Onondaga,

71

;

of the Canadian

;

633, 634; of M. de Vaudreuil's letters,

of letters

;

made up

of letters from Canada, IX., 196

;

M. de Callieres' project, 411

845, 947

New

;

chief, attends a conference

governor Clinton, VI., 295 589

of the evidence

;

trade, relating to

of letters of Messrs. de Vaudreuil and Begon, 949, 955 of the correspondence upon the subject of the forts at Niagara and

388. (See Indians.)

Abraham, a Mohawk

of acts of the

of the proceedings of the society for

;

with the Abenaquis, 945

Ahitihis river, where, IX., 286.

;

propagating the gospel in foreign parts, not

de

Abjuration. (See O'th.) I.,

York, VI., 639

English,

2d]

Bertie

of safety, 630

books of the lords of

in the

despatches

privy council, IV., 961, 1127.

Aborigines,

New York committee

of

Abert, Johannes, IV., 940.

answer, 493

latter's

correctly, VII., 538

represents, VII., 767.

Abergaveny, lady, marries lord Delawarr, VI., 163.

Abingdon [Montagu

[Abe-

Dongan, and of the

;

peninsula

chusetts patent, V., 596; ;

of

Onondaga and Cayuga sachems,

347; of Mr. Santen's charges against governor

Nova Scotia, 624 make any alteration in

third of to

479

;

;

;

included within the Massa-

;

of,

hardly one-

the English requested not

matters of religion in, VI.,

the fivnch about to erect a fort in, 583

;

other-

;

\.. I

Acadia — eontinutd. wise called Nova Boot!

hi

'

K.,8;

to,

pari of

Ibid, 7f

pendenoj

! i

I

i

or of, 87

population M. de !

U di M. de Marson, oommandant of

France, lbid,268, 787, 918

to

128

,

j

of, la

1;7:»

1

L36; theFrenob.ni

,

L57, 168

Vallii

La

I

:

153;

fleet,

memoir

;

of

>u.li.sii.:m on, 160; condition of, Ln L681, L66;

oooupy pari

h

Buffered

L99

In,

168

of,

olaimed

;

Bui nenol

;

extend

to

not

be

to

the Kennebec

t"

7-^2

267,

ttle,

ill.

Che

abounds

;

withfish,286; the English enoroaol on, 346, 800, 917,

920;

918,

French

to, .'177

433

of,

the Canibas to

;

continue hostilities towards, 453; an expedition

from Quebec 4tl4;

the English, 499

506

to,

;

498

of,

report on the affairs of, 527

moirs on,

549

exist,

;

783;

702, 782,

74s

;

nor '

671

in,

738

to,

of,

803, 809

to attack, 845

781

in,

of,

758

treat the inha-

ill

to the English, 871, 894, 914,

931; connecting claims respecting, 879; English expeditions

in,

M. Begon and reverend

924, 925, 927;

father Aubry draw up a

memoir

on, 931

fuse to swear allegiance to the English

932

;

differences as to

what

is,

;

the French re-

government

933, 981

;

in,

views of the

French regarding, 986, 987 a great number of catholics in, 995; no Recollect missionary in, 1003; the French meditate' an attack on, 11(»7; its conquest ;

suggested, X.,

French, 4

;

1

inhabited almost exclusively by

;

French project against,

tre, vicar-general of, 11

news from,

;

M. de

Micmacs

of

la

Lon15

in,

;

a French expeduke d Anville expected in, 71

39, 47, 61, 380, 416, 427

dition against, 42 its

number

;

9

;

:

;

;

security to be looked to, lu'4

at the pretensions of

;

the French alarmed

the English

reverend

:

them

I

ti

I

U Nova '

Leave

t"

i

I

216;

Bcotia,

to,

and taken prisoners, 358 380

elly,

a

i

>ej/e

;

a

used by the English cru-

;

'.

ported, and return to Heir country

behalf, 140

Canada

the governor of

removed

;

to

In

220

of,

;

one of

fori

;

Beausejour to capitulate, 671;

fort

973; provisions in the treaty oi M

to, L116, 1117.

Acansa, V., 622. biter of M. de Bourlam

Accaron, Mr., X., L067; 1139.

Accomacq

(Virginia), at,

II.,

news respecting the Indian war

Indians to massacre the English

New

Account, an, of

Netherland,

at,

98.

179;

L49,

I.,

Prim river and of the unseemly conduct of Netherland

.

lost in the

th

and discovery of New

there, 587; of the situation

Netherland, and of the encroachment of the English on it, II., 133; of the taking of New York by the III., 199,200; of the general concern! York, 254; of the assistance rendered by Not York

Dutch,

to

Ne"v

of what

Delaware, 342;

Andros and the last

between

passed

five nations,

557

;

of M. de la Salle's

expedition and discoveries in

580; of the proc

published, printed

at

Boston

in L689,

629

North America,

lings ;

at

N

of the proceedings of

JoostStoll, 632; of Thomas Clarke's interview with .-ir William Phips, IV., 8; of the live nations, by Levinus

Van Schaick,

168

;

of major \V. —els' negotiations with

the five nations, 372

;

printed, of governor Fletcher's

romance, 420

of

the negotiations

exploits, a

225

Messrs. Schuyler, Livingston and Hansen at

;

a gulf of expense, 263 in,

;

differences regarding,

299

;

the English capture

two French forts in, 340 state of affairs in, 358 M. de Montcalm recommends an expedition against, 492 its reduction proposed to the court of France, 495 ;

;

;

;

the English seize a considerable

number

of French

re-

90; the Dutch accused of inciting the

the most serious losses experienced by the French,

290; military operations

their

the]

Una, 540; dying of hunger, 547 ant oi

ceived

commander

Castin appointed

St.

ceded

;

;

resumed in, baron deLery

M. de Suberoas

;

of the French in, 854; the English bitants of, 858

;

preparations making by the English

;

baron

;

Mothe

early governors of,

;

hostilities

;

oonvenienoe of the coast

terms a settlement

way

liis

La

English capture several ashing

the

smacks belonging

M.

;

;

Moth.' Cadillac resides

L64

war

i

Mires adopted bj

count

;

extended meM. la news from, 630, 635

Cadillac's information respecting, 546

wed, L55

seized by

;

chevalier de Villebon on

;

.-nit

Bettlemenl

lish

a

reverend Louis Petit, missionary in, 475

de Frontenao assists the Indians

la

Denis' history

;

Ln danger of being destroyed,

western boundary

401, ill;

the

of

right

;

early historj of, 379

;

mentioned, 380;

of,

371

respecting,

disputes

furnish supplies to French

daga, 054

;

;

of the illegal prosecution

and

of

Onon-

trial

of

colonel Nicholas Bayard for supposed high treason,

printed in

New York, 972;

of the maladministration

in the various departments in the governmeut of

New

York, by chief justice Mompesson, V., 406; of Ger-

;

GENERAL INDEX. Account



man 515

families remaining in the province of

;

French

of the

New York,

New

of the trade of

;

York, 685

Clinton's conduct in regard to the VI., 399

47

IX.,

New York,

Ontario, 75

called

secretary

ber, 1690, 455

in 1689, 1690, 462

;

;

Dutch and Indians

of English, ;

into the island of

of occurrences in Canada, 381, 397, 401 of the

French army

of Oswego, 457

544

;

555

;

of the

;

Port Mahon, 430

at

of an attack

embassy of the

on

fort

of the siege

;

William Henry,

nations to Montreal,

five

of two expeditions against the English, 569

the campaign in North America in 1757, 640

&c, 645

capture of fort William Henry, pedition against the

German

;

Flatts,

672

;

;

of

;

of the

of the ex-

of the battle

;

;

of the

French cam-

paigns in North America from 1755 to 1758, 912

of

;

the expedition against Quebec under general Wolfe, 1001, 1016

;

(See

general board

of,

of

affairs I.

149

,

;

New of

moneys borrowed and

48,

II.,

340;

oi

yearly to England,

686

III.,

York, IV., 173, 756 ;

public, to be transmitted half

;

of the revenue of

;

New

of governor Fletcher's,

state

;

of military stores at Schenectady in 1696, 431;

governor Fletcher's, purloined, 522; of imports and exports at

New York from

1724 to 1725, V., 774;

of negro slaves imported into

1726,

814;

from 1723

897

;

New York from 1700 to at New York

and exports

of imports

to 1728,

of the

number

of inhabitants

in the province of New York, 929 (see Census)

made 1750

at

Ancram

in the

to 1757, VII.,

manor

;

of iron

of Livingston, from

336; of quit rents, 901; books

belonging to the French,

fall

into the

hands of

sir

of,

Wil-

Quebec, IX., 46.

;

population

of,

in

I.,

599

;

of, 600.

Ackkonepak, a Pennecook Indian, IV., 996. Acklawaugh creek, VIII., 32. Acossen, the Indian ^Acosta, Joseph d',

name

II.,

I,

34.

of M. Lemoine, IX., 185, 186.

35, 40.

Acouiresheche, a Mohawk, IX., 1110.

Acoutache, notifies the Iroquois that the French are about to attack

them, IX., 274.

Acrelius, reverend Israel, notice of, VII., 168.

Actanaweei, an Oneida sachem, IV., 728.

Act of possession by the French, of forts and places III.,

among

135.

Acts of grace begin with the King, IV., 699. Acts (Barbadoes), making bank bills a legal tender, passed

(

and vetoed, IV., 1188. To increase the trade and navigation of England,

British.)

(See Trade Jets.)

Of the Duke of York imposing duties on goods imported into New York, III., 217; continued for three years 246; nullified, 289.

For reversing the attainder of Jacob Leisler, Milburn and others, governor Fletcher attempts to defeat the, IV., 322; legalizes Leisler's assumption of the government, 400 burned, ibid;

;

governor Fletcher refuses to obey, 401 title of,

1018; lord Cornbury's obser-

vations on, ibid.

For the suppression of piracy extended to the plantations, IV., 666, V., 47; amended, VI., 278. Regulating the cutting of timber in America, the Earl of Bellomont's suggestions respecting an, IV., 675.

For punishing mutiny and desertion, annual, IV., 782. For prohibiting all trade with France, ordered to be pub-

liam Johnson on the reduction of Niagara, VIII., 362.

Achaoualena, a Saguina chief, X., 184. Achinnhara, an Oneida chief, III., 121, 126; ambassador

Robert Lapriere ar-

Jonathan Singletary

Acora, the Dutch form a commercial treaty with,

Netherland,

186; ordered to be audited, 336; audited, powder, 452; of governor Lovelace, ordered

to be settled, 720, 721

421

New

;

Jersey.)

the Iroquois,

Netherland, by the

disbursed for the city's colonie in

New

mark

under chevalier de Levis, 1077.

Accounts, report on the

;

606

Achtienhoven, Michael Pauw, lord of, I., 70. Ackehoorn, an Indian sachem on the Delaware river,

of Ticonderoga, 734, 741, 747, 788; of major Grant's

defeat near fort Duquesne, 902

598 603 at,

;

of the losses

;

of, of,

;

in

of the battle at the Monongahela, 303

be magistrates of the

to

;

;

Clinton, N. Y., X., 79; of an incursion of a party

Montreal, 81

;

576, 577;

II.,

;

of an expedition against fort

;

Hacking-

on the petition of order on the petition of the sheriff of, 682, 683 Thomas Johnson of, 694 an appeal allowed to the order on an application from district court of, 714 the court of, 722, 723 order on a petition from Elizabethtown in, 728; taken by the Dutch, III., 203, 213.

1694, 1695, 594; in 1695, 1696, 640; in 1696, 1697,

664; in 1697, 1698, 678

Cull),

183; altogether ruined, 190

1673, 607; mentioned, 657; order

war with the English and the Indians, ;

;

rested by the sheriff

in 1690, 1691,

550; of occurrences in Canada in 1692, 1693, 555

Author

cull,

placed under surveillance

513; in 1691, 1092, 534; of occurrences in Canada in relation to the

X.,

commission of the sheriff and names of the towns of, 595, 622;

579

at,

595

of,

ance to the inhabitants

Canada in Octo-

of occurrences in

;

Michilimakinac,

captain Knyff sent to administer the oath of allegi-

of the expedition of M. de

ing the Indians, 194;

Denonville, 331

I.,

recommend persons

several towns

of the meeting held at Quebec, respect-

;

near

New Jarsey, order on petitions from,

order to

of the state of

;

of nine Iroquois

;

chief

sack otherwise called,

of M. de Frontenac's voyage to lake

;

Ontario, 95

795

Indian

Achter Col (AghterKol, Arthur

of M. de Courcelle's voyage to lake

;

an

Achrireho, an Onondaga sachem, IV., 910.

Canada expedition,

ans, transmitted to England, VII., 686

the province of tribes,



168, 170.

campaign against the western Indi-

of the

;

of governor

;

Achoabmet,

and In-

forts, settlements, routes

dian nations between Quebec and the Mississippi,

620

[Ace

Achiro, an Onondaga sachem, IV., 986.

continued.

to

lished in Lord Cornbury's governments, IV., 1140

published

in

New York,

1167.

;

GENERAL INDEX.

Ail |

For preventing

pondenoo

traitorous oora

all

her

wltli

in";

to the oolonli i,

Qrea< Britain, tran mitted

Of toleration, the reverend i\

!

LJ87;

i

I

.

olaui

i.

7.,

For preventin jesty's

|

II

III

one only,

\< t

reoommended, 501; amended, 518, 519

act

;

set-

a new-

;

contin-

Quieting and settling the late public disorders, and

;

the

last

clause

of,

Albany, passed,

III.,

fifty

men

to

firmation

725

I,

I.

am

;

nnl

confirmed, IV., 73.

indemnity :

in

consequence

another reoommended

of the government,

;

passed V., 379;

bills of credit,

390

firmation urged, 389, ;

an

to

I

of indemnity, passed, IV., 324; recommended

be

to

confirmed, 820, 1111.

For preventing vexatious

&c, passed,

suits,

IV.. 524;

the earl of Bellomont transmits information repealed, V., 25.

Repealing an disorders,

act for regulating

recommended

damages during the

;

re-enacted, VI.,

late

for confirmation, IV.. B20.

public

L004; amended,

681.

(124,

For the better securing the

five

suspended,

nations,

passed, IV.,

72:!.

Granting two thousand pounds IV.,

713;

its

to the kiie_r, its

approval

postponement cited

For building a

fort at

Onondaga, passed, IV..

oblige persons to pay their arrears of

passed, IV., 119.

For paying the public debts, passed, IV., 133, 202, 958, 999 for paying and discharging the public debts,

398

of, 2

654.

as

a

proof of the earl of Bellomont's disgrace, 714.

To defray the extraordinary charges

and issuing



to,

21; confirmed, 4-, 472: captain Evans'

of,

for

tory of the, 651

713; repealed,

majesties to be raised on all real and personal estates.

act

to,

continuation received in

tory act called for by,

;

its

con-

lord Clarendon's objec-

passed explaining

answer to the objections its

71

« ithhold

Against Jesuits and popish priests, passed, IV., 713.

reinforce

813.

Granting a rate of one penny in the pound to their

it,

to

passed by the

:

822; necessity of approving, 824; the lord engaged iii a report on, B44; rep Jed, 111-, V., 26 report of the heail of trade, recommending the con-

1065

repealed, IV., 1114.

For raising one hundred and

tions to

I

made

passed, IV., 713; another enacted,

nizing their majesties' right to the province

795

ot

[V., 628

To appoint commissioners to examine the

ued, 676.

III.,

of,

529; efforts

approved,

petition

For raising one half-penny in the pound for the support of government, passed, 111., 477; referred to, 566.

To levy

of,

approving, B15; some of the objections

declared in foroeby Leisler, 676

;

age

approval from, 533

;

pi

;

th" earl

;

by the passage

government,

te

V., 915

L0,

7.

For defraying the requisite 111.,

,

.

ting certain exti

To prevent frands, passed, \

'

i

V., 181, 185, 812.

prohibited from paa

acoused of

VI]

VI., 47,

For

405

;

471

;

confirmed, 412, 470

;

it.

New York, 447

and sent

to the

;

40:2.

explana-

board of trade,

the

72.'!;

tax

to for

erecting a fort at Onondaga, passed, 1064; explained,

1114; reason

for explaining, 1115.

To punish and prevent mutiny and IV., 7S1, 7S2, V., 701,

812, 895,

Outlawing Philip French and Thomas IV., 958

;

Wenham,

a most unjust act, 999.

Augmenting the number bly,

desertion, passed, VI.. 30, 624.

passed,

IV.,

9 38

of representatives in the ;

for

assem-

regulating elections

of



,

GENERAL INDEX. Acts (Xf,v York)

continued.

representatives, passed, V., 25

repealed, ibid

;

manor

late the election in the

for their frequent election, passed, 113, 130 trad.-

opposes it, 129, 130

it is

;

more legular proceedings

why

enacted,

ibid



and

;

for the

counties, passed, 927

;

an act for regulating

to explain

of representatives,

passed, VIII., 167; to

why

;

For defraying the public and necessary charge of the government, passed, IV., 1064, V., 367, 581; explained and amended, IV., 1064; provisions of, V.,

hoard of

;

vetoed, 136, 142

regulate elections in Albany, 565

passed, ibid.

For regulating the election of aldermen in the

New

;

in the elections of represent-

atives in the several cities

elections

to regu-

;

of Courtland, VI., 28

city of

581

to

pay

among

and

scouts, passed,

its officers,

New York

to

supply vacancies

and regulating the

militia,

passed, IV.,

revived, V., 181, 185, 299,

For regulating slaves, passed, IV., 1004

583,

;

631,

revived, 1168

preventing the running away of negro ;

for preventing,

;

slaves,

suppressing and punish-

ing the conspiracy of negroes, passed, V., 356

;

the act

them running away, revived and continued, the negro act recommended to be modified, 46 1

to prevent

418 471

;

;

more of,

act regulating

them, continued, 782

effectual preventing

for the

;

and punishing conspiracy

passed, 905.

To prevent doubts and mistakes and cial

proceedings,

its

for continuing judi-

872, 873, 895, 904,905, VI., 39, 87,88, 118, 160,221,

For charging the several cities and counties with the expense of fitting up a room for the general assembly, passed, IV., 1114; reason for passing, 1115.

1004, VI., 24, 25; vetoed, 48.

;

for the further

New

For

settling a ministry,

passed, IV., 1167, VI., 2; an-

other act passed to explain, IV., 1167; the confirma-

recommended, 1168

tion of the latter

passage of the original

act,

respecting, 334, 336

1.

;

VI.,

V., (

;

328;

date of the

controversy

See Henderson

;

Foyer.)

For the preservation of deer, IV., 1168; V., 782. For an allowance to the burgess of Westchester, IV., 1168.

To enable William Bradford to sell the real estate of the late John Dewsbury, passed, IV., 1168. For the defense of the frontiers, passed, IV., 1183, V., For regulating and preventing the corruption of the current coin, passed, V., 66

For the encouragement of a grammar free school, passed, school in

French church

344, VI., 623, 684.

confirmation urged, IV., 1004.

For repealing several acts of assembly, passed, IV.,

IV., 1004

elders of the

1168, V., 583, 632, 683, 701, 739, 782, 812, 813, 847,

738, 872, 903, 927, VI., 30, 38, 87, 118, 160, 185, 221,

for

1065.

VIII., 355.

616, 624, 642, 680, 940, VII., 918, VIII., 341, 565.

passed, ibid

oyster

For laying out and regulating highways, IV., 1064, 1114,

passed, IV., 1004.

firmed, 1039, 1183.

1004, 1065;

it,

To enable the ministers and

Granting her majesty £2,000, passed, IV., 1004; con-

For settling

rum and burning

and powers to the rector, &c, of Trinity church, New York, passed, 1114; reasons for passing it, 1115. To regulate weights and measures, passed, IV., 1064: nature of

fuzileers

to expire, ibid.

distilling of

to build a larger church, passed, IV., 1064.

of

city

when allowed

shells in the city of New York, passed, IV., 1064. For the better maintenance of the minister of the city of New York, IV., 1064; granting sundry privileges

IV., 1004, 1183.

Enabling the

;

To prevent the

York, passed, IV., 958.

For levying .£1,800

[Act-

encouragement of a public

on, 67

For the better maintenance of the poor of the city of New York, IV., 1004; of Dutchess county, VI., 185

;

report of the lords of trade

vetoed, 71.

For regulating fees, passed, V.,82, 230; vetoed, 143, 157.

To

York, VI., 118.

;

relieve the colony

from divers extortions, vetoed, V.,

J43, 157.

To enable the mayor, &c,

of

New York

to raise the

sum

;

of £600, vetoed, V., 158.

of Suffolk county, 625.

money,

For laying an excise, passed, V., 178, 185, 378; con-

Declaring Eastchester a distinct parish, disallowed, IV.,

For laying a duty on goods sold by auction, passed, V.,

To enable the mayor, &c,

of

New York

to raise

firmed, 412.

IV., 3004, V., 909.

178, 417, 418.

1038.

For raising

fifteen

teries at the

hundred pounds towards erecting bat-

Reversing the judgments against colonel Nicholas Bayard and John Hutchins, passed, IV., 1064; attorney general Northey's opinion thereupon, 1118;

amended, 1140

;

report

1123; ordered to be

another act passed accordingly, 1168

Albany, passed,

IV., 1064; to enable the justices of the peace of Al-

bany a

to repair the gaol

new court house and

and

city hall,

1168

;

to build

gaol there, VI., 185, 226.

For the better settlement and assuring of lands, passed, V., 181, 185; objections to, 503; governor Hunter desires

To

its

repeal, 480.

repeal an act to oblige Mr. Robert Livingston to ac-

count, passed, V., 181.

1173. to build a gaol in

and

;

sent to the lords of trade, unsigned and not dated.

To enable the justices

a clause in an act against counterfeiting

clipping foreign coin, passed, V., 181, 185.

Narrows, passed, IV., 1064.

of the lords of trade thereon,

To repeal

To prevent the burning of woods, passed, V., 185, 210. To repair the blockhouses, &c, in Albany and Schenectady, passed, V., 185,210.

To collect arrears of taxes, passed, V., 185, 210. To enable Islip to elect assessors, collector, constablo and supervisor, passed, V., 185, 210.

GENERAL [NDEX.

A,,| Acts (New York)-- COnttHUtd,

B88, 681, 682, 683, 700,

V

amended

180, 210, S2S, 524,

,

,

200; report of the lords of trade on, 202; rotoed, 206, Lieutenant-governor Coldeo

In favor of,

210;

pa

re-

709;

Y

ounces of plate

rum

thoutandeeven hundred

to the

mi niied, 738; report ofthe con

in the

V.,,344; for continuing the

to

elect a supervisor,

and providing

act,

trad-,

,\

811; to regulate and

for continuing tin-

;

&c,

titles of

nut

du-

899.

fortifications of

Bcheni otadj,

military watch with

their

;

dill'.

firewood,

passed, V., 418.

For appointing an agent

at the

court of Great Britain,

governor Hunter's observations thereon, 420

;

;

continued, 480, 812.

For the easier partition of lands in joint tenancy, continued, V., 418; revived, 527; report of the lords of never signified to the government of

passed in 1726, 805

896, VI., 118, 161, VII., 907.

V., 379.

New to

report of the lords of trade thereon, 650

For collecting and paying to the county treasurer the arrears of taxes in the county of Richmond, passed,

against

812;

its

it,

;

York, 644

an

act,

;

ibid;

another act

;

memorial of Cadwallader Colden

807; less objectionable than former acts,

confirmation requested, 832;

report of the

lords of trade against, 843 vetoed, 875, 876. For the partition of certain lands in Dutchess county, granted to Sampson Bronghton and others, passed, ;

For the support of government, passed, V., 379, 576, 582, 904, VI., 117, 160, 184, 221, 466, 615, 616, 625, 640, 642, 647,

658,

680, 691, 702,

VII., 203, 342,

Indians,

and

for his excellency's

for presents

tion of lands, passed, VI., 215

expenses in

220

;

Mr. Walpole's objections

369

;

re-enacted, 486

Albany, passed, V., 379.

For the treasurer's paying the arrears due

to the clerk

and doorkeeper of the assembly, passed, V., 390. To entitle Gerrard du Grau and his assigns to the fishery of porpoises, passed, V., 390.

For shortening law

suits

and regulating the practice of

the law, passed, V., 390; the judges' disapprove

new

act

in having

recommended it

to be passed, 501

;

of,

no

suits, V.,

390

;

the

judges of the supreme court remonstrate against, 461.

farm the excise, passed, V., 390; continued,

2

;

under consideration,

to, 273 lieutenant governor Delancy censured for assenting to it, VII., ;

;

referred to the lords of tho

treasury, 504.

For the treasurer's paying several persons therein named, and for paying the excise in arrear to the treasurer, passed, V.,418.

To

relieve Robert Lurting,

vince of

vendue master, of the pro-

New

for laying a

disallowed, 509.

For preventing the multiplicity of law

VI., 29.

Regulating the payment of quit rents and for the parti-

907; report of the board of trade on, 505, 918.

For the treasurer's paying a sum of money

let to

Indian

governor Burnet refuses his assent

For licensing hawkers and pedlars, passed, V., 379,

harm

of

on the goods therein mentioned

regulating the

For the better repairing the

tioned for the use of the colony, passed, V., 378.

a

for

ties on Indian goods,

For levying and paying the several duties therein men-

to

of the lord-,

trade thereon, ibid; reviving act, vetoed, 529; veto

passed, V., 378.

to the

r,-p,,rt

ibid; abandoned, 77-^; no action on the report of the Lords of trade on, 779;

V., 418

V., 378, 390.

;

secure the Indian trade west of Albany, 812

privilege to his widow, 739.

To empower Dutchess county

be

the several acts, 898

For paying sundry sums of money therein mentioned,

;

761



repealed,

781; explained by another

ada in the year 1709, passed, V., 344. all but John Parmiter to make lampblack

going

it,

support of

In

of the lords

of the

menta

to lay different duties

Prohibiting

for five years, passed,

effects,

1

proceeding

;

title.-,

;

oonttnuin

as y,t

to

pay their arrears of taxes, passed, V., 299. For paying the British officers, passed, V., 344. For paying the arrears due to the forces late raised hi the county of Suffolk for the expedition against Can-

tin- art, 74'j

tin-

and

county of Westchester

of, 7 in

reasons for repealing

to

act to prevent tho selling or giving of

manors

good

i>

i

trade thereon, 760; object icnal.le point - in, 78

governor, passed, V.,

county of Alhany, passed, V., 299, 344.

To

e,

Of trade on

or other strong liquors to the Indians in tho

oblige the

Albany,

at

890, and prohibiting telling [ndl

,

299.

461

,

report of the lords of trade on, 707;

fortifications, patted,

treasurer's paying three

fifty

For reviving an

To

V

ed,

,

dian affairs In favor

tin-

vn

680,

hibiting the telling of Indian goods to the Pn

the surviving commissioners to aot for the

of plate, passed, V., 299.

ounces

''.IT,

the French, 677; for the further and more effectual pro-

299.

and

221, 624,

1

For raising two thousand eight hundred and Bfty-five For

I

OOUtinO I-.",,

explained, -12, \ 160 P01 the enooun • menl of the Indian trade

expedition to reduoe Canada, patted, v., 299.

To prevent the impairing the

t

I

pealed, 214. (Sec Cun

*

b)

I

remo

publishes a notice that be never consented to Clarke's

r.

from the oounotl, 48, 49,60;

removal

for his

Jer ey, 23

recommend

they

;

death of governor Cosby,

from

2S

26; report of the Lorda of trade

t,

plaints against, alluded

oalla

INDEX. or radar,

Wow

to attend the oounoll of

tin-

\I.

— rnnlinuril

Thomas, knight, notice

Dutch

fleet

Crown,

of,

II.,

in the bay of Cadiz, 329

at Gibraltar, 342.

274 ;

;

attacks

the

leaves the ship

;

GENERAL INDEX.

24 member

Allen, William,

of the council for trade and planta-

colonists, 51

Allerton (Alderton),

one of the eight

Isaac,

140, 191, 192

I.,

;

New

of

53

;

announced

signs a letter

chamber at Amsterdam, 213 witness to a sale by the Indians on the Delaware, 597, 599.

III., xiii,

assaults

makes

demon-

ware, 70

a

signs a petition to king William, IV., 935; address to lord Cornbury, 1007.

calls the

71

;

III.,

94

of the

543, 591

;

;

member

Connecticut, 388.

Aimer.

Almey

York,

Almshouse, boys and girls recommended to be sent Jfctherland from the, I., 364; children sent Netherland from the, 556, II., 52.

4;

The Bold

is

to

Foresters, VIII., 602.

;

be sent out, 7; arrives at describes the Delaware river, 11 ;

of

;

at-

South men, 617

sheriff of the

river,

com-

;

605,

614,

instruction to,

;

authorized to seize captain Carr's estate,

authorized to receive millstones lying at the a proclamation sent to, 67S

;

English,

III.,

74

swears

;

ensign Stock to have

;

New

Amstel,

8,

10;

and enumerates Ins

;

continues his reports, 13, 49 preAmstel, 14 and plans of other

New

New

member

;

of the

York, 600.

Wandal and, to,

ment

IV., 511

556

;

appeals, 550

;

;

writ of appeal

lieutenant-governor Nanfan censured

an appeal

to,

634

reversal of the judg-

;

in favor of, not agreeable to the practice in the

explanation of the error in reversing

colonies, 635

;

the judgment

in favor of, 768.

New York,

IV.,

333.

;

map

;

England, 433,

negroes overland to the South

lot of

authorized to enlist ;

of

South

by the English, 434

are captured

Alston, John, a pirate, arrested and sent to

requests that a clergy-

man

;

;

New

nephew

at the

sloop employed by, captured, 438

;

for refusing

'

New Amstel, sails from the shipwrecked on Long Island, 5;

arrives at the Manhattans, 6

necessities, 12

purchases cattle in

;

send a

to

commissary

;

Alsop [Richard], judgment reversed in the ease of the widow

New New

Alrichs, Jacob, vice-director of

18

which

;

refused to

d'Alogny, marquis, serves in Canada, IX., 859, 860. Alphonse, Jean. (See Sainlonge.)

II.,

for the back-

a grant of the land belonging to, 115.

;

places, 15

430

496

Ill

general committee of

-

reports the death

;

Alsop, John, elected to congress, VIII., 470

sents a memorial to lord Bellomont, 678.

pares a

river,

fidelity to the

(See Helmer.)

Alner, James, captain of

sick, 113

;

107,

Alsace, marquis de Maillebois, governor of, X., 372.

for 1758, referred to, X., 756.

[Christopher], heard before the attorney and solicitor generals on the part of Rhode Island, IV., 105 pre-

Texel,

112

106,

reports the

;

blamed

659

New Netherland, II., 387; his speech on the annexation of the English towns on Long Island to New

of,

deceased, 196.

Whorekill, 663

with commissioners

from

Almanac,

;

II.,

num-

and the troubles

;

;

622

of the general court of Connectitreat

Amstel, 76

;

618, 632

one of a committee to

the

receives a letter from Maryland,

state of the colony, 115

mandant and

IV., 153.

cut,

New

ward

river, ibid

III.,

member of sir Edmund Andros' council, succeeded as secretary by Eleazer Kimberly,

Allyn, Mathew,

;

reports the

;

also the

;

of reverend Mr. Welius, 114

tempts

one

;

commissioners of the United Colonies,

273, 274

73

Van Sweringen complains

sheriff

;

Jacob Alrichs,

secretary of Connecticut, 585, 652, 656,

;

707, 787, IV., 100, 188, 190, 192, 193, 628

and

;

of the Whorekill,

Alrichs (Aldrickx, Alrigh, Alrigs, Alzicx), Peter,

387; demands the annexation of West-

II.,

III., 86,

commences the settlement

state of his colony,

830.

(See Bahia, Bay of All Saints.) Allumettes, Les, M. de Coulange winters at, IX., 594.

chester, 391

;

protests against colonel Utie,

;

108; Mr. d'Hinojossa writes against, 110

All Saints, bay of.

erland,

;

with the Indians, 78

15,'i

Allyn (Allen), John, deputy to the general court at Hartford, appointed to treat with the delegates from New Neth-

67

of,

from the Delaware, ibid

to depart

ber of houses at

the Mascoutins, IX.,

at the falls of St,

Alloway, captain, wrecked,

governor Fen-

;

acknowledge the authority

proceedings of governor Fendall, 75

and an

Dahcotahs the Iroquois of the west, Mary, 804.

governor of Mary-

to the

reports that lord Baltimore lays claim to the Dela-

69

;

to search for minerals

;

history and progress of the colony described by, 68,

III., (573;

stration for rescuing the prisoners at the fort, 742, 744

J., visits

him

orders

III., 74.

Allison (Alinson), Robert, dragged prisoner to the fort by

;

nor to allow an appeal from judgments

;

dall refuses to

191, 192.

lieutenant-governor Leisler, 740, 741

the commissioners

land to send back some runaways, 64

of the council for for-

order of lieutenant-governor Leisler,

;

the opening of the trade

;

not to tolerate any but the reformed

;

member

Allison, Mr., required at the Delaware,

92

;

below a certain amount, 62 and a gold mine, 63 applies

Ailing, Jno., IV., 936, 1008.

Allington [William, 2d], lord,

Allouez, reverend Claude, S.

61

to,

religion, ibid

;

of lands

eign plantations,

describes the Swedish settlements,

;

some law books, 54

receives

;

;

of the colonie write to, 60

active in obtaining sig-

natures against director Kieft, 204, 207 to the

men

;

the almshouse, 52

Allen, William, chief justice of Pennsylvania, VII., 402.



urges the sending out of more announces the arrival of children from

mentioned, 21, 56, 187

tions, III., 31.

Amsterdam,

[All

;

describes the progress of settlement, 16, recommends the settlement of the Whorekill. 19 ;

;

Alstyn, Isaacq, IV., 939.

Altamaha (Alatamaha)

33

river, VIII., 32,

;

how

formed, X.,

951.

Altarbaenhoot, a Connecticut sachem,

Altcwaky, an Ottawa chief,

West

Altona, fort Christina called,

II.,

;

140.

visits Detroit, VII., 784.

Altingh, Mr., accountant of the

sent to, 19

II.,

India company,

15

;

76; mentioned, 178.

I.,

217.

a vice-director to be

William Beeckman, vice-director

of, 49,

)

-

;

GENERAL INDE

Aire] alsouet, oaptaln, X., 6

l

7

,

MM.

1

.

th

I

memoir tgg

boom and f,

598

the weal ride of the South

800

Amaaon

(ft a

ana bounded

bj

66

U

in-.il

the

;

within the

;

733

,

Dntoh), to England, writes to their high

(the

Thomas

Sir

Dale's

17' Instrnotions to the, considered, 29

I.,

India companies,

1

1

mightinesses

i --r 1 »

33;

England, journal of the,

to

their high mightinesses write on the subject of the capture of the ship

Nev, England, 34;

the,

Bendracht, 46; transmits an account of an interview

with the .isi-

all

-hip.

kint;

about the Bendracht,

possible

means

1

l

capture, 55

instructed to

-:

obtain the release of thai

to

52, 53; address kin- Charles

I

respecting her

answer of the English government

;

informs their high mightinesses of the

the, 57;

to re

high mightinesses a chants against the

New

t

be

propi

of

toi

li

communicates to their complaint of some English mer-

officers of the

Netherland, 71

high mightinesses

;

West

India

company

calls the attention of their

Nova, 102

to the fisheries at Terra

the

).'•

pit. nt,

th. ir

irttcnlan of the publt



i.

ral for

to,

732

prion In

:nK

;

it

i

Netherland transmitted

the surrender of N.v.

\ndr--w "

Isi

commissioned

i

t

burghers of New

receive

Nen Netherland

;

reports to their high mightinesses the progress of

Xork,

744;

I

the

reports

thecourl of England, 745

affairs at

{The English), the states general resolve to grant have of absence of, I.,

Thomas

to oapttiD

2 ; addn

of the Btates genera]

i

ommend-

n

attempts of the Dutch to ginia, 58, 59

the

;

king Charles,

133

in ;

as,

504; sir

;

Dudley

sir

William Tem-

lord Preston in France as, 579,

Waldegrave; Walpole)

Muscovy

to the court of

(The French), arrives

report on the

418 (see Downing)',

II.,

as, ill., 6, 7

(see Albemarle, earl of ;

Whitworth sent

his

;

Sweden

sent to

Hague

Holland, 178

ple, to

2-

27,

L6; resolutions

reoommendation

commence plantations in Vir-

quits the Hague,

;

Henry Coventry at

Thomas Dale,

in relation to the

respecting Virginia,

of,

Dale, on the application

of, totl .

Carleton

lease of the Bendracht, 60;

in

lit

ore a favorable Bearing for the Dutch

;

is in

i

the

to

informs their high mightinesses that Sir Ferdinand Georges wishes a commission for his son who

to

to

Netherli

cted to Inquln p on ii authorized to r Ive New Bletherkuid, 566 ; farther communication from, 567; the orders* of the si

is

respecting the proposed union of the several West

ibid

noted

New

restoration ol

th


Jacob Eikins sought

;

Great Britain that

company in 1645 north part

of,

the privileges of

New

the Dutch pos^^

to

persuade the king ot

New Netherland was

a part of his

West India

for the regulation of trade to, 223

the English the

;

;

ships sailing to the

;

obliged to take passengers to

Netherland, 391 of,

;

majesty's domain in, 94; order of the

duties on imports from, 225

right to be a

the case

12,

10,

bound-

the most convenient portion of, 64; Hutsoirs river

New

planters

first

in

boundary between the Dutch and English in, 539 limits claimed by the Dutch in North, 546 names given by the Dutch and North, 486

;

;

largo quantities of

;

reasons against

;

in,

11

in,

at,

a port of entry, IV., 298;

it

affairs,

v.

aries of the

493; the king proclaimed

359.

II.,

the battle of Sillery, X.,

at

10S6.

X.

354, 416;

stabbed

officer

VIII.,

at,

III.,

inconvenience of

;

trade carried

;

governor Frank-

;

349.

a port of entry, 392; Scotch immigrants

it

910, VII., 497

holds a conference with governor Tryon

I.,

making arrive

at,

seat

reverend Solomon Palmer, ap-

of government, 910

Aiuelot

Perth Amboy), opposite Staten island,

;

and the

VI., 170; a polite place

at,

New

occasion-

Carthagena

for the

on with the West Indies from, 226

355.

at, II.,

embark

troops to

lin

;

Amboy (Amboyne

expedition

New Jersey legislature sits

the

;

;

the

and report progress on the affair at, 54 question agitated, GO; the Dutch promise to pay for the inhu;

949

983

ally at,

did

the court of England decline

at

meeting the English commissioners on the subject 49

B55; governor Cosby sworn in as governor of Jei sey at,

42.

I.,

d'Amblemont

[AltB-

division of the

;

;

;

York to be maintained against, 509 the duke of York opposed to the pretensions of, 521 state of the ;

;

claim

of, to

591, 777

;

be a port, 546

;

the ship Hester seized

particulars of the seizure, 605

hall decides in favor of, 719

at,

Westminster

;

soundings between Eliz-

;

English to their respective parts

number

finest in all

North,

;

estimated

II.,

150; the

549

of,

of English, in 1641, in, 567,

South river the

I.,

588; chevalier

de Poiney, hereditary governor in the islands of, the Dutch claim title from the king of II., 24, 32, 33 ;

abethtown and, 837

why the

;

to be taken from, 875

961

;

meet

lordCornbury at,

1149

;

tie-

the chief

;

at,

at,

V., 84

;

town of East Jersey,

1136, 1190; the legislature to

legislature

32; a Scotch ship at, IV., 1185

goldsby

ship Hester was allowed

meets ;

at,

1170, 1190, V.,

lieutenant-governor In-

procure alternate sessions

efforts to

of the legislature at Burlington and, 171

;

the sessions

of the legislature ordered to be held alternately at Burlington and, 207, 461

;

Thomas Earmer collector at, 231

Mr. Swift succeeds him, ibid the collector

at,

264

;

;

general Griffith dies sentative of, 421 to

meet

mission of, in

to the

at,

481

at, 57.'!

;

j

;

at,

401

;

at,

the legislature of

;

354; attorney-

Thomas Gordon,

New

repre-

Jersey desire

governor Burnet publishes his comhis excellency at, 802; the

merchants

favor of applying the interest on bills of credit

payment

negroes entered

Of public expenses, 810; a return of at,

814; the naval

sent from, 822; George

II.

officer's

proclaimed

at,

accounts

825,827;

governor Moutgomurie's commission published

lands

at,

93

in,

;

in,

80

;

the king of Spain

who conveyed to the Dutch all his Dutch had as much right as any

finder of, 91

first

the

;

other nation to take possession of lands

in, 94,

lord Baltimore petitions for an unsettled tract

138; latitude of of

New

;

97

;

in, ^d,

Netherland in, 133; the people

endeavor to drive the West India

New England

company from, 135 in, 139

Mr. Birchfield turns out

a Darien ship brought to, 335

reverend Mr. Haliday, "missionary

Spain to their possessions the

;

date of the French discoveries

the English encroach on the Dutch posses-

sions in, 216, 229

;

limits of the

commercial monopoly

Mr. A;. pelof the Dutch West India company in, 228 boom complains that the Swedes have been expelled ;

from, 240 in,

241

;

right of the

demand

;

Swedish crown

to

for the restitution of tin-

Nova Suecia Swedish

col-

ony on the South river of Florida, in, referred, 217; the Dutch West India company demand the restitution of the places captured from them in, 255 possession taken by the Dutch West India company of the South river description of the places granted to the duke in, 258 ;

;

of

York

in,

295; count d'Kstrades viceroy

vindication of the

title

of the

Dutch

of,

349;

to their posses-

;

\vi

JLA.L

INDEX

t?

Bloni

population

h

389; order

en i"

i\



'"

i

i

''it.'ii

to

i;

.

l

of land in.

:-

iii

'.

...

obg irve the

605; the

inanj

centre of

"'

pi.- lata

to

ler

of peao of,

from

of the Btuj

l

Cbreij

all

I

narrath

-

-nit denies the

v
:i i

I

ions

li-

in,

:

granted a charti

with

e

i

oppre

i

Spaii

includi d

lioi

foi

th

737, B25

III.,

mory

the mi

;

IV

of the

oolonies S

in,

510

in,

Benjamin Fletcher

a

IV.,

New Fork

20,

38

29,

French

the

I

i

and

governor

all

8H

in

the

frontli

Dutoh

166

about sailing

is

III.,

to,

plantations in, 30

affairs of the

the Dutch to settlers in, 37

Dutoh trade

;

privi-

;

the French

the English plantations in,

to

New England

New England

42;

in,

the

.

Fi

papi

a

;

mode

the best

40

to root the

Hamilton points out

French out

Wilson's report on the colonies

206

in,

201

of,

;

governors of the plantations

225; report of the

in,

lords of trade on the northern colonies in, 227

61, 57; mentioned, 61; colonel Nicolls governor for

rial for

the duke of York in, (37; New York the best of all the French march into the duke of the towns in, 106 York's territories in, 118, 119; the king of England ;

119; M. de Tracy, lieutenant-general in, 122,

all,

12G, 127, 134, 135, IX., 17; colonel Nicolls obliged to

remain in, of,

154;

III.,

136

map

;

M. de Tracy, viceroy of the islands

men174; John

of the northern department of,

tioned, 156; colonel Lovelace arrives in,

Evelyn appointed one of the council for the affairs of, 192; petition respecting whaling in, 197; advantages of

New York in, 211; major Andros appointed a gov-

ernor

in,

215

foot

;

companies sent

the duke of York proprietor

Fast Jersey in,

225

;

;

and conveys away-

;

223; the Uensclaers claim privileges

Andres governor

sir F.

219, 220, 691

221; appoints a col-

in,

lector for his territories in, 222 in,

to,

25b, 259, 266 267,

in,

30S, 536, 537, 543; the Maquaes the most warlike

Indians of in,

275

;

to,

279

;

all

North, 260; difficulty with the Indians

John Lcwen sent as the duke of York's agent William Penn about to repair to, 290 lands in, 300; Thomas Don;

to proclaim civil

and

in,

James

328, 330, 331, 337, 369, 377 II., in,

ecclesiastical,

360; accounts of

all

to be transmitted

376; a treaty of neutrality

in,

agreed

:

order

matters,

from, 375,

to,

388, 505,

506, etseq., VI-, 620, IX., 313; pirates infest,

490; treasure- trove carried

appointed a collector

in,

of hostilities in, 504, 505 to settle the boundaries

to,

4'.>1

;

Matin

III.,

w Plowman

501; order for the cessation ;

commissioners appointed

between the French and

New York

the defense of

in,

244

panies the only standing force in the

pay

England

of

customs

292 in,

;

to

265

in,

offioers

;

296

;

;

;

memocom-

four

of the king

and

of the admiralty

be commissioned for the plantations

William Penn's plan

for a

in,

union of the colonies

information required by the board of trade

respecting the production of naval stores in, 298;

and protected

pirates encouraged

encroachments importance

in, 311,

478, 578

to the plantations in,

in, 299,

;

3S5

French of great

Mr. Randolph,

;

commissionimproving the trade of the planta-

ers appointed for

tions in, 424;

583

New York

;

surveyor-general of the customs in, 390

;

views of the lords of trade on the

and boundaries in, 475 a desert country, woods, 505 instructions concerning

fisheries

;

covered with

;

patent offices, ships of war and pirates in, 530

;

bounds

of the English possessions in, 578; pirates seized in, to

be sent for

ilton's,

trial to

England, 5S5, 603

plan for maintaining troops

tion respecting the western parts

Ronier, chief engineer

granted to the duke of York,

overnor

John

;

the redaction

;

Canada would make the king of England emperor 224 reports to be made to the board of trade by

of of,

in,

o

iota of the colour

way

the only

granted, ibid; instructions to commissioners sent to,

grasps

re

i

inst the

d

Englit b colonies, in, L67, 170

12;

William Clayborne lioensed to trade in, 15, L6; James In, 22; a oommittee ap-

of

admi-

ol

L12;

i

north parts of Virginia in,

Dutoh Bhip seized whioh

Parret, lord Sterling's agent

and

tween

bi

r

|

fore ih" board

minister of the reformed

pointed for the

in,

i

i

petition

2; a

.rk

i

northern pari of, 513; ad

Norl

In

the

Dutch Weal India company

plant

taken from the Dutoh

bat

the English plantations

all

Downing aooompaniea

Qeorj the

to

c

Indisputable to

i-

title

his parents to, 415-;

land

Bto|

i

41]

it- of,

England's

Hr.-t

.rk the

i

sent (" reduce

v

come

to,

;

in,

Ham-

679; informa-

of,

749

colonel

;

75Q; one standard of coin

who

757; character of the ministers

for,

766

in,

colonel

;

lord Bacon of opinion that England can

be furnished with naval stores from, 737; not bound

by laws made

in

England, 930

;

orders issued for the

security of the British plantations in,

965

;

regular

packets proposed to be established between England

and, 1030, 1031

;

attempts to regulate the currency of

the colonies in, 1131

London regarding assemblies

;

observations of the bishop of

a suffragan bishop in, V., 29

of, will, if

;

the

not prevented, furnish plenty



;;

GENERAL

28 America

continued,

work

of

board of trade, 33

for the

'

service in, 37

44

several palatines petition

r

public

be sent

to-

John suggests the putting

secretary St.

;

impudent conduct

;

prejudicial to the

of the governors greatly

to,

North,

all

285

in,.

122;

of the

state

1721, in, V., 591 ibid

map

473; M. de Lisle's

to,

and English can430

of,

;'

queen

George Clarke desirous in, 623 appointment of stamp commissioner

of obtaining the

208

in, VI.,

;

a bill introduced into parliament to pre-

;

money

sent paper

lish title to, 885

643

in,

the British colonies

;

to,-

plantations in

extent of the French territories in,

;'

English possessions

925

of North, referred

British

considerations for securing and enlarging the

;

names of the governors

;

761

in, 756,

;

of

foundation of the Eng-

troops ordered

;

915, X.,275, 728,

to,

governor Shirley advises the imposition of duties

on stamps in, VI. 959 what number of troops is necessary to be kept in, VII., 3, 6 thoughts on the Indian ,

;

;

the earl of Loudon apin, 36 two battalions to and four regiments to be raised in, 40 ; major-general Amherst appointed commander -in-x;hief in, 345 James I. makes grants in, 360 the oath of supremacy to be taken by all persons going to, 361 no bishop clergymen in, on in England lias jurisdiction in, 363 interest of British North, 15

;

pointed commander-in-chief

be sent

;

to,

;

;

;

;

whom man

Oxford has conferred degrees, 451

of,

497

what new colonies ought

;

a gentle-

;

made

goes to England with design to be

bishop

first

to be estab-

lished in, 520; a plan reported for the regulation of 4lie

new

acquisitions in, 539

memoir on

;

the French colonies in, 220

war in,

302

in,

-

f

304; the French accused of encroaching on

;

considerable trade car-

on from Holland with, 585 ; North, proposed to he divided into two Indian departments, 635 James ried

;

Napier director-general of hospitals in North, 931

;

of

London and

378, 387

;

iiV

English-

;

•commencement of the seven years general Braddotk commander-in-chief ;

;

Anne's death frustrates the seheme of sending bish577, VI.,

216

designs in, 239

disciplined in , 344

not inhabit in peace the continent ops

at

tory belonging to the English in, 340

the Freneli

;

t* the court of Franee complains Of the French,

sador

;

under one government, 255 the British parliament passes an act affecting, 283 a bill introduced into parliament to raise and appropriate a revenue in one of the colonies

INI>EX,

terri-

militia not well

;

correspondence between the courts

;

Paris on the differences concerning,

France and England send troops

390

to,

the English minFrench intelligence from, 475 istry determined to concentrate all their force in, 526 the English in, 632; an faith of constant bad almost ;

;

account of the campaign of 1757,

640

in,

British

;

regiments in 1758, in, 682,756; French campaigns, 1754-1758, in, 912 number of English troops in 1758 ;

925 position of the French and English in, 926; France and England struggle for the preponderance in,

in,

;

(See Acts, British

941.

;

United Slates.)

America Septentrionalis Pars, map, I., faces title. American independence declared, VIII., 682, 684. American manufactures encouraged, VII., 888. American navy. (See Navy.) American patriots wear only American manufactures,

VII.,'

888.

"American Querist," the, Dr. Myles Cooper author of, VIII., 297 burnt by the hands of the hangman, ibid. American revolution, commencement of the, VIII., 571. Americans purchase large quantities of arms and ammu;

nition, VIII., 510

submit in the

to

;

will hazard everything rather

parliamentary taxation, 598

French war, 616

are

;

;

becoming

than

their services soldiers, 633

defeated before Quebec, 663.

American

trade, powerful influence of

merchants engaged

in the, X., 526.

Amerong (Amerongen), Godart Van Reede, memoir of, II., 308.

lord of,

Amerongen, Godart Adriaen Van Reede, lord Amersfoort (Amersfort a

Dutch

;

village

117,

I.,

516.

of, II.,

Amesfoort; Amesfordt; Amesvoort). on the west end of Long island, 1.,

parliament passes an act imposing duti«s in the planta-

285, :i60, 476, 498, 544, 553, 565,

tions in, 980; objects of colonizing the continent

374, 407, 443, 463, 479, 480, 488, 573, 589, 620, 643,

VIII., 27;

no gunpowder

Britain to, 509

;

a naval force ordered to, 587; will

never receive parliamentary taxation, 589 against Great Britain, 591

tinued, 635

649

;

;

of,

exported from Great

to be

list

packet boats

;

;

in arms

discon-

to,

of British regiments in, in 1775, 6,

expected to return to her allegiance, 755

coveries in, IX., 1, 72, 168, 266, 303-305, 701 of the English territory in,

165

;

;

;

dis-

extent

encroachments

of

the English in, 265, 917 all differences to be settled between the French and English in, 314 memoir on the French limits in North, 377 French viceroys of, ;

;

;

782, 783, 784, 803

early voyages to, 913, 915

;

cedes to the English

Kennebec,

in,

915

mo establishment to

;

all

;

France

her possessions south of the

prospect of the French possessing

in, X.,

exchange of prisoners

exchange of prisoners

4

;

in,

abstract of letters relating

189

royal orders for the

;

in, 197, 199

;

the English ambas-

659,

673,

482, 577; has

at,

at,

ibid;

number

lation in 1673 of, 596

from, 702

company Amherst island,

of,

;

sworn

;

580; popu-

depu-

IV., 809.

of,

New

in,

of the officers of the

foot

(See Flatlands.)

X., 350.

Amherst,

Jeffery, senior, VII., 548. sir Jeffery,

captain Abercrombio aid-de-camp to,

VII., 160; appointed ;

of English quar-

;

Amherst, 345

conduct

militia officers of, 646

names

;

375,

of,

Orange, 586

501, 502; magistrates

ordered to assist in fortifying

ties

134, 136, 229,

a fine church, 404; riotous

of captain Scott tered

II.,

696; names of the magistrates

an embargo

commander-in-chief

to be declared

346,356; brings reinforcements

in

America,

on the requisition to

America, 349

;

of,

his

instructions for the campaign of 1759, 355; colonel (jlridloy

serves under, 357; informed of the disaffec-

tion of the Sonecas, 376

;

the Indians notified of tho

.

Am>|

i.i:ni:1; \i. •

Amherst,

M

;

.'eler

trade oop) of

of

101

|

t

olosee

;

i

oamp

lie

eoretarj

aflairsj

lands vaguely desoribed

in

in

to be Becrt tary of In-

the memorials

the expedition under* 473

trad.'

prohibited, 499;

be

on his grant

that matter, 508

;

a1

report

Niagara, 502

IT;

grants

:

and

a large

company, 488;

of

New

|

annuity from the oron I'Aioi

bis explanation of

j

ni

m

cheva-

b

I)

2d

t,

t

lord

|

VII

n,

di

immendi

X

d,

I

Amireaiieaii, IX., 571

Amnesty, an,

oflfi

era, X.,

red by M. de Vaudreuil to military d

1074.

d'Amonoodrt. (See Bdt d'Amouis, Mr. (See D •

a

iker, V., 663.

Amsterdam (Holland),

board of

the

i

;

23

I.,

1"".

91,

83,

137, 138,

15,21,27,28,29,30,

4, 6, 11, 12,

142, 144, 148,

101,

102,

159,

157,

104, 125,

136,

174, 217, 218;

162,

227, 228, 232, 237, 345, 359, 432, 434, 455, 459, 467,

William .Johnson

468,514, 562, 567, 572, III., 7, 12, 151; two companies of merchants of, begin to trade within the

j

550;

Ian

William

i

to England, VII William Pltl Amhi

1

issues Lioenses to every one to trade

With the Indians 010; to, 510,

Amherst

country perfectly secure, 491;

requests thai the exportation of provisions from

York

(

1

ool

I

Lawrence to Montreal, 1121

St,

I

Amiroankanne,

168,461,469;

VII., 463,

tract of land at Niagara-to a trading

Mohawk

;

the six nations steady

Levis, 465;

declares the

445

to,

New fork, 460, X.,9

In

additional troops,

reduoes fori Intrepid

to

agreeB to the

;

tl,.

L1

v..,i.

plan of

1


!

thi

to the five nations, 222,

appoints Robert Hunter governor the Indians condole the death

VII

or,

ill.,

,

m

of,

of,

III.,

802.

771.

11

»waj ill.,

532.

Anse am barraquea, X Anse auz eabanes, where, X., 111. 159 Anse aux miles, on lake Erie, oolonel i.

tndians

the colonies, ;

congratulate lord Cornbnry

the

three lower counties on the Delaware,

;

N

bJef,

of the board

in

NV« York, 960

in

thi

Andros, 742; the

proclaimed

to be

vole addresses to, 1003

225

In

,

Anowarre, an Oneida Indian, Bir

num.

212. 218;

,

518.

Hon

elei

(Sei

l.

A confers

;

121.

,

v

,,

Gorham 1

III

:,

.

898.

,

662, 564

II.,

on her aocession, 986;

fired in

at,

nil

.

,

.

'',

her accession announced to the fire na-

Jersey, 961; tions, 1)82,

oolonel

;

!

1107

741.

w

Montague's memorial against

to Mr.

Antill,

vacating the extravagant grants, V., 7; of brigadier

Hunter

New

to certain queries relating to

dressed to the lords of trade, 555

;

general Golden to those queries, 121

missioners of Indian

New York

;

of Mr. Colden

New

the assembly of Clinton, 365

;

;

493

;

of the

York, presented

to

governor

sues Mr. Santen for slander, 413

;

John, marries Margaret Colden, VIII., 221. Antilles, M. de Tracy sent to Canada from the, IX., 25. (See West Indies.)

Anti-rent riots, early, VII., 206, 833, 838, 849. Anti-sabbatarians in New York, III., 415.

Antonio, a Spanish negro, sold in

New

;

of lieutenant-governor Colden

Antonisen, Claes,

II.,

Antwerp, Cornelis Melyn, a native

New York,

Anuchrakechty, chief

of M. de Longueuil to the message 595 White River Indians, IX., 707 of the French the memoir of his Britannic majesty, respecting ;

of the

;

1062

tario,

M. de Beauharnois to the Indians, 1073, of M. de Vaudreuil to the nations, X., 361; of M. de Vaudreuil to M. de

27

;

Antelby, William,

;

refuses

Melyn's case, 152;

249

;

454

I.,

notice of,

II.,

43

;

mentioned, 464

admitted attorney and

;

his oath of office, 677

;

;

swears allegiance

III.,

(See Lespinard.)

480.

Anthony, John, member of the general committee of

Anthonys (Antonis), Christian,

II.,

la

expected in Aeadia, 71, 72

;

island

French, IV., 790; two

in

of,

frigates

granted to Louis Joliet, 668

possession

seen

off,

of

the

IX., 622;

a ship wrecked on, X.,

;

121.

Antigua (Antego, Antegoa), the Dutch

accompanies, 250

sell

horses

at, I.,

455,

of,

616

;

of vessels cleared, 1714-1717,

for,

a slaver

615

;

value of imports and

bound

to

New York

touches

church of England established in, VII., 365, 367; the French reduce, IX., 1(17; reinforcements sent to Cape Breton from, X., 4; belongs to

at,

774.

Apalachies (Apalachy, Apalatch6, Apalichian), mountains,

;

referred to, VI., 888, 955

;

proposed as

a boundary between the French and the English colonics, X., 1138.

French formerly Apaquois, meaning

of,

settled at. V., 625.

IX.,

887

;

the Illinois cover their

Apell, John, IV., 26.

Aplin [John], treated with contempt by Dr. Mayhew, VII., 537;

Dr. Seeker

591

his

;

Apolatche, bay

knows nothing

pamphlet sent of,

927;

the English, 6; admiral Townsend

dore Lee returns from. 104.

at,

46;

commo-

of,

566; a lawyer,

to Dr. Seeker, ibid.

V., 625.

Appeals,

number

from Great Britain exports

III.,

(a place), IV., 1164.

V

;

the marquis de la Jonquiere

;

Aothdarisex, a Seneca chief, IV., 342.

Apontigoumy, an Outawa

;

686

bio-

several of his ships

;

his fleet unfortunate, 387.

;

Aontgesachton, a Seneca chief,

Aorage

sails

arrives at Chiboucton, 74;

his fleet captured, 94

503; John Bunckley, governor of, III., 45; referred imports into New York from, to, 573, IV., 552, 1145 57,

73;

of,

;

;

cabins with, 890.

ticated, III., 698.

,

On-

Rochefoucauld, duke, his

Apalachicolas (Palachakolas), on the Savannah river, the

480, 481.

Anthony's nose (lake George), X., 601. Antichrist, Canada alluded to as, and its downfall prognos(Antecosta),

VI., 796.

the English not in a position to resist, 31

;

the, V., 611

Anthony, Theophilus, member of the general committee of New York, VIII., 601.

Anticosti

New York,

where, IV., 1089, VI., 122; the Cherokees inhabit

527.

I.,

of,

engineer at the siege of Oswego, X., 560.

New

York, VIII., 601.

Anthony, Nicolaes,

customs

Aouischik, a Nipissing chief, accidentally kills the French

to the English, III., 74.

Anthony, the Frenchman,

;

V., 589.

return to France, 107

Netherland,

sent to Holland to request assistance against the

notary, 671

Caghnawaga,

at

349

of, I.,

referred to, 180

;

(Enville),

some of

burgomaster,

;

New

signs the remonstrance of

English, 435

55

graphical notice

papers in Cornelis

to collate ;

II.,

from France, 64

652.

III.,

Allard,

31.

N. de squadron scattered, VI., 887; sent to Nova Scotia, 944; arrangements for the troops in the fleet of, X.,

of

Montcalm's memoir on Carillon, 873.

Anthony,

II.,

d'Anville, M., erects a trading post at the head of lake

d'Anville

1079, 1082, 1088, 1091 five

alluded to,

980; to the earl of Waldegrave's note,

fort Niagara,

Netherland,

105, 179, 180.

to the committee of New York, VIII. , 586; of governor Tryon to the address from the corporation of

to

a lawyer.

;

IV., 556, 812. Antill,

to those queries,

to the representation of

feeing in copartnership with, 407, 408,

of governor Clinton to queries of the .Antonio, Nicolas, IV., 27.

board of trade, 507



com-

of the

to the representation of the

eouncil against him, 331

;

of surveyor-

the same, 126

affairs to

collector of the port of

; ;

the, ibid.

Edward, gives information in support of charges against sir Edmund Andros, III., 314, 315 governor

Dongan denies

York, ad-

of president Clarke

to queries of the hoard of trade, VI., 120

127, 393



Anti-leislerians hold a convention in Albany, VI., 153; Rip»

continued.

to lord Cornbury's reasons for suspending hiin, 1022

of Mr.

Ans

village, attacked

by Senecas, IX.,

788. lie to the director and council of New Netherland from the courts of the patroons, I., 87, 122, 404; allowed to Messrs. Cuyter and Melyn, 219; mandamus in a case of, 250, 351; in what cases provided in New England, 266; cannot lie from a judgment of the

director

and council of New Netherland, 306, 334,

423; director Stuyvesant threatens to put to death any one who should sue out, 310 director Stuyvesant ;

GENERAL

-Arr"|

I

in

With

('• writ of,

,

ri

the

will

:i

in

J

whal

the

1

New Netherlands H7.

dlreotoi and oounoi] of

fi

pro

n Neth-

j

1

1

;. 1

arland,

aounoed

in

further proi 170

the buI

Ling

the

fri

;

the Delaware,

i

Limit

from

L66

of,

a

20!

attoi

modification

;

tli

Bterdam considered oneroui 174,

62

II.,

L67;

,

rurtl

i

from the

i

a

subjeot of 206

by Hi" granl

olution of

duke

the

to

fori

of

the me-

thi

-

.

from

land, 515, 517;

th

provided

a

Sweden and

when

allowed from judgments of the oourts of Wil-

lemstadt, Rensselaerswyok

from the oourl of Huntington,

154;

allowed, 001

what cases

in

New Netherlands, town oonrts Lie to

the governor-general and counoil of a

writ of, 686; from

Appelgadt

opposed

setts

III.,

to,

oomm

87; the king's

act as a court of, 107;

which

provisions

;

for,

260, 379, 389, 539, 625, 688, 829, 857, IV., 269, V.,

137; from the plantations

301

III.,

;

lie to

the king in council,

New York

from the mayor's court of

to the

mi morial

.

of,

by re-

ompany

complaints

258;

of,

Bartholomew, allowed

the Nevesing Indians, it,

resident

at

the

Appell, Arien,

to

purchase lands from

694$

II.,

a

caveat entered

706.

Appelgadt (Appelgate), Thomas,

considered a breach

is

of the privileges of Massachusetts, 111

II

'J

24

260.

,

courts, 704; granted, 707, 714, 724, 726; Massachu-

iflered

tl

-\'\ 242,

answers the

New Orau

from the court of



satisfaction for

the By ferred,

a

II.,

694, 706.

III., 74.

Appleby, lieutenant-general Stanwix member of parliament for, VII., 280; John Robinson represents, VIII., 432. Apples in large quantities near Detroit, IX., 886. (See Fruit.)

Appleton, captain, expelled the legislature of Massachusetts,

111., 160. king in council, 366; in New York, in 1696, IV., 186 from a judgment of the governor and council of Appletown, New York, VIII., 786. ;

New York

to

England, refused, 550, 556

grounds

;

for

the refusal, 550; from the governor and council of a

colony lies lated by th"

only to the king, 622, 636

:

Bellomont, 623;

earl of

this rule vio-

Lieu!

ernor Nanfan censured for refusing, 634

1

shire, 7; 0;

sition

and

of the

proceedings

in

Mr. Penn's

New Hamp-

Massachusetts, ibid, 854; compo-

New York

in, ibid

;

refused in

suggestions regarding, 757;

;

court

828;

of,

mode

of

order of the queen in council ad-

mitting colonel Bayard's, 961

;

Mohegan

of the

Indi-

ana against the colony of Connecticut, order thereon,

1176

;

the society for propagating the gospel ask

alteration in the law of, in cases

of England

is

an wherein the church

concerned., V., 345; order in council

thereupon, 352; Mr. Mulford's case before the lords for hearing, 503

instruction in regard to, 816; issu-

;

ing of execution to be suspended until the final determination

of,

817; provided for clergymen of the

Appletreewick,

II.,

741.

Appomatox (Apomatock), III., 193, 197, Appoquiminy (Apoquemans, Apoquenamins, Apoquiminink), Andreas Hudde dies at, I. ,81; distance from Mai viand

to, II.,

211

mentioned, 605

;

Henderson missionary Reading missionary

at,

V.,

at,

321;

;

reverend Mr.

reverend Mr.

VII., 413.

Appropriations tor the support of the government

York, a

bill

460, 466; controlled by the

L6j

assumed by the New York assembly bill for granting, VI., 141

615.

o

granting, lost, V., 184; annual, 366, 379,

(See Acts,

New

;

powers

in regard to the

period for which granted,

York.)

Appy, John, judge advocate in America, VIII., 189; secretary of general Abercromby, X., 773; and of general Amherst, 1120. Apsley,

sir Allen,

treasurer to the

duke

of York,

III.,

214,

246, 267, 268, 291, 292.

church of England in the colonies, 852 not allowed from judgments of justices of the peace in small

Apsley,

causes, VII., 406

Apthorp, Charles Ward, appointed member of the council of New York, VII., 023 lieutenant-governor Colden

;

mon

;

law courts in

the

New

lawyers are opposed

to,

instance

first

York, 676

677

;

of, ;

from the com-

why New York New York

controversy in

sir Peter, III., 267, 268.

Apthorp, Charles, a merchant of Boston, VII., 375.

;

refuses to admit

him

to a seat, 628

;

one of governor



;

GENERAL INDEX. Ward

Apthorp, Charles

member of governor Tryon's make his case known to sir

;

council, VIII., 685; to

Henry Clinton,

Arents, Fredrick,

continued.

Moore's council, 763

Canterbury, VII., 374

biographical sketch

;

treated with respect at Cambridge,

entertained by the bishop of Norwich

Johnson's opinion

Mayhew,

;

opinion

;

of,

518

Dr.

;

declines answering Dr.

536;

of,

375

of,

Massachusetts,

unwilling to leave Cambridge, 425

;

591.

I.,

Aquarage, a place near Niagara,

III.,

Mohawk sachem,

Aquedagoe, a

obliged to

fly

696; condoled on the his sou poisoned,

;

from Onondaga

or Sadegenaktie, 729

;

Albany, ibid.

to

five nations,

716

asks for a protestant minister,

Aiabian gold current in

New York,

IV., 469, 480; value of

Aragiske, the Indian

name

of Virginia,

Arajungas, a Seneca, delivered

up

III.,

417.

India

William Johnson

to sir

England, decision of the,

Arbour,

,

New

a resident of Gaspe, X.

,

reserve,

I.,

96.

Netherland and

at,

VII., 561, IX.,

772

announced

the reduction of Louisbourg

;

to,

extract from his des-

;

informed of the expedition against Crown

313; the defeat of baron de Dieskau com-

to, 316, 353, 355 report from the army in Canada sent to, 347, 368 return of the French loss 360 further reports of at Lake George sent to, Braddock and Dieskau's defeats sent to, 365 marquis

municated

;

;

;

;

his aid de

camp

to,

375

to,

387

baron de Dieskau sends

;

notifies

;

M. de Vaudreuil of

requested to give encouragement to privabiographical notice

of,

773

;

;

announces the appointment of major-general Montcalm to command the army in Canada, 393 promises to ;

recommend chevalier de Montreuil, 394 sends M. de Montcalm his commission, 395 M. de Montcalm ;

reports his arrival in Canada to, 399

in

Canada, and

its

encourages

411

to,

army

413, 420,

to,

421, 432, 487, 488, 490, 547, 550, 563, 565, 567

baron de Dieskau

Oswego reported

to, 461,

commissary-general, 535 ;

;

;

422, 537

471 his

;

appoints his

;

to appoint

to,

638

;

let-

;

the reduction

nephew

resignation accepted,

a friend of the marquis de Montcalm, 598

mised 689

to,

the

letter of

;

the state of the

;

operations reported

de Montcalm attached

Arbuthnot, admiral Marriot, on the North American station,

;

Point,

536

;

;

;

patch, 30

of

104.

1098 where, 1072. Arbres mataches (Lake George), X., 601.

teers,

formerly governor of

;

biographical notice of, 29

;

ters of

460.

I.,

Arbre croche, what Indians are settled

VIII., 766

X., vii

2

marquis de Vaudreuil

company proposes to

boundary between

Arbitrators on the

river, 17

;

as a hostage, VII., 622.

West

on Manhata

preparing to

;

the appointment of a successor to M. de Dieskau, 392

(See Gold.)

of, 469.

Arackkonickko, an Oneida sachem, IV., 897. Aradgi, an Onondaga sachem, IV., 658, 660, 661, 998; a great favorite of the French, 694.

New

751.

,

Virginia, ibid.

de Vaudreuil writes

(See Sadaganachtic.)

Arasick, the

X

d'Argenson, Marc Pierre de Voyer, count, minister of war,

Sadegenohty, speaker of the

a piece

159.

;

'

IV., 728.

occasion of his son's death, 571

730.

733, 734.

Aresum, Thomas, IV., 1006. Arforder, Thomas, exchanged, X., 881. Argal, sir Samuel, and others, remonstrate against the settlement of tin/ Dutch in New Netherland, I., 58; complained of by the French ambassador, III., 1 order in council on complaints against, ibid answer settle

442.

597, 657, 658, 660, 693, 695,

;

I.,

II.,

744.

III.,

Arepesee, captain, killed at Ticonderoga,

596.

Aqueendera (Aquadarando, Aquadarondes, Aqueenderande, Aqueendere, Aqueendero, Aqueenderonde, Kaqueendaronda), chief sachem of Onondage, IV., 62, 86, 569,

alias

578, 702, 729.

of the council of Virginia thereto, 2

Aquahoorn, a Delaware sachem,

689

Arentsz, Lucas,

193.

III.,

249, III., 74.

II.,

II.,

;

Apuleian mountains, journal of a new discovery behind the,

'

Arentse, Claes,

Arentse, Cornelis, cuts out two English ships,

Arentsen, Isaac,

765.

Apthorp, reverend East, recommended to the archbishop of

404

[Aft—

mentioned, 652

;

;

M.

pro-

M. de Levis marechal des camps,

furnished M. Doreil with a cypher, 768

M. Doreil to be commissary-general

;

to the

selected

army

in

mentioned, 791 ; at New York, 811. Archer, John, surrenders the right to nominate magistrates estate of, ordered to be seized, in Fordham, II., 625

d'Argenson, Marc Rene de Voyer de Paulmy, marquis, min-

demands the Fordham town books, 721 proFordham, III., 303 quit-rents of, accounted

d'Argenson, Pierre de Voyer, viscount, governor of Canada, IX., vii, 783; baron d'Avaugour succeeds, 17; sends

privateers, 778

;

;

708

;

;

prietor of

;

ister of justice, X.,

v; controller-general,

reyerend father Dablo4i

for, 309.

Archipelago (Archeppela), the, where,

415, 545. (See Nor-

I.,

walk Islands.) of,

founded,

II.,

X., vi.

d'Argenteuil, lieutenant, IX., 562; sent to Michilimakinac,

arm amputated,

III.,

wound-

569, 648, 676

;

commandant Frenchmen accom-

subject to the orders of the

of Michilimakinak, 625; several

;

194.

Arensius, reverend Bernardus,

751, 799.

;

pany him from the west against the Onondagas, 696 brother-in-law of M. de Ramezay, 847; arrives at

Arenoc, IX., 783. (See Oronoco.) I.,

Hudson's bay, 268.

l'Argenterie, captain, dead, X., 73.

348.

d'Arenes, lieutenant, distinguishes himself, X., 693 ed, 723, 846; his

to

vii.

d'Argenson, Voyer de Paulmy, marquis, minister of foreign affairs,

Architecture, the academy

Archives. (See Records.)

Arensen, Cornells,

Canada, 828.

415.

Montreal, 848

;

dead, 855.

;

GENERAL INDEX

Arm] nl

of oounoil

,

Argyle

and again

for

Indian trade,

itlnj the

the

I

\

Ni

ork

"i

Irohibald Campbell, 9th earl of], unfortunate

|

Invasion Fohn,

\

ii

duke

-in.

men

in-.',

hi

Bootland,

ol

vim

of,

VIII

I

1

1

1

rebels In Bootland,



them

repre-

to

171.

,

[ro

bii

In

ivi

,

680; lord William Campbell eleoted

,

in thi

p

i

|

WE

,

serve against

of,

u

aol

16

5

.

up

d

the falls of



I

Hud

the

at

I

Argyn, [.,168 .\

ria

,

Mohawfc oaptain, on

s

493;

Arianism, In Ne^ En [land, V Arianzen, Jan,

war excursion

for lands al fori

burns the deed

L6j

.'i

to \

tothedeed forthe Mohawi

party

a

[.,

\

i,

Inj

li

Batl

Hunter,

,

\

I

\

.

ill.,

.

m

L6,

IV., 986.

Armstron

deliver*

Huron

director Ki.it,

I.,

Edmond,

down

Rob

,

sent, X., 282.

nndred men at

chief, VII., 651.

Greenwich, Connecticut, VIII., 582; tonappointed

in

ordered to

195.

New

ommand

-

729

r-in-chi

I.,

the,

Van Gogh

invites Mr.

5'.i7;

to the,

ibid,

591

of,

on lakes George and Champlain,

memoir

of,

of, II.,

Salisbury, 357; Mr.

to

346

eral

;

Van

Lee

of,

taken prisoner, 677

strength of

ibid; invades

Hessian brigade at Trenton, the, at Kingsbridge, 696; defeated

land, 567

Virginia raises six battalions

;

principal secretary of state,

;

156, 168, 175, 193, 203, 204, 211

reports the condition of his

138,

governor Nicolls

;

government

men composing

to, 103, 113,

136; letters of governor Winthrop

Mr. Maverick's

be delivered

to,

161

indisposed, 174;

;

the lord chancellor to

letter of

Mr. Maverick

member

to,

river, 204,

member

loss of

New

;

for,

Btren

the, 805;

York, 205;

campaign against the New

name

of marine

and

colonies, vi

;

min-

Armonck, I., 366. Arms, Daniel, VII., 903. Arms, Eliakim, VII., 903. Arms, John, VII., 903. Arms, Susannah, VII., 903. Arms, William, VII., 903. Arms, heraldic, of the Andros family, II., of the duke of York set up in the nations,

III.,

878, 895.

363

;

set

up

.

the, 806

lier-generals in, ibid;

Ne\i it

Jersey brigade

Regiments, continental:

The Canadian battalion incorporated, VIII., 662. 2d Canadian, or the Congress' dun. Moses Hazon colonel

of,

VIII., 777. >>> v.

VIII., 600.

Huntington's brigade, VIII., 806. Parson's brigade, VIII., 806.

Waterbnry's, escort general Lee, VIII., 667.

Maryland 740.

at St. George's river, IX.,

of,

and the Pennsylva-

Connecticut, plunder the ordnance stores in

castles of the five

;

nia line, ibid.



Armenverius, a district on the Schuylkil, I., 593. Armer, Anne, released from captivity, X., 882.

t

of th

revolts, 810; congress satisfies

;

V
rernor

o

I

652; reported confined

ii.,

.

New

at

Orange,

Banks, James, lieutenant of fnsileen, V., C46.

Banks, ensign John (46th foot), at Oswego, VII., 854. Bannasitoron, an Oneida chief, IV., 93. Banning, Jan, Bante, D.,

I.,

187.

II.,

466, 570, 629.

New

Banyar, Ooldsborow, deputy clerk of the council of

York, VI., 494, 505, 527, 545, 591,

.094,

6

111.,

communicates proposals for deputy secre-

1002, VII., 679;

866,

an exchange of prisoners, VI., 500;

the

New

York,

tary

council on his claims to the Delaware, 339.

310; deputy auditor-general, VII., 359; clerk of the

supreme court, 684

352.

II.,

of,

Bams, John, X., 883.

793, 794; fees

III.,

&c, 284; son, 480

323.

Bancker, captain Evert, resident commissary among the

summoned

from Oswego,

to retire

New York

assembly,

VIII., 456.

Bancroft, George, his character of General

;

communicates a

Bandoliers, what,

II.,

letter of

Wentworth,

VI.,

reverend doctor Johnriver,

I.,

588.

New

of,

VI., 849; doctor Sher-

act passed in

Barbadoes

of, I.,

213, 349.

to establish

some-

;

resi-

York, 599. of,

VIII., 189.

New England missionary

refuses Indian children,

number

in

of,

to transmit

Canada

in 1671,

IX., 73; in 1672, 89; in 1679, 143.

Baptist,

,

in garrison at fort Frontenac, IX., 236.

IV., 20, V., 572;

IV., 343, IX., 691; a

New England

III.,

pilot,

conversant with

takes a prize off cape

;

Cod, 617; a privateer of Acadia, ;

inflicts

considerable

lived a long time at

Boston, 661. Baptists.

(See Anabaptists.)

attends conferences with the In-

attends a council held by governor Fletcher,

submits views

on Indian

affairs,

176;

obtains a fraudulent grant of land, 330, 391, 783, 785 of,

345, 346, 363, 743

wounded,

;

;

signs a

385, 386, 387, 397, 399, 455 to,

234 256

547;

New Netherland

;

trades in tobacco from,

rule observed

;

admiral de Baxter ordered

England from, 340 416

;

to, I.,

by English traders on arriving

;

visits,

Netherland

importance of the trade

289; negroes sent trom Guinea in

X., 1089.

New

Barbadoes, horses exported from

771, 772, 773,

dians, III., 805, 840, IV., 90, 279, 281, V., 271, 715,

the Indians complain

French

coast, 576

Barantte, captain, mortally

river, VIII., 31.

175;

with David

Barachois, what, IX., 924.

IV., 1188.

Banker, Evert, an alderman of Albany,

;

office

surrogate,

an Indian conference, 482

damage on the English, 636

Netherland, sentences

Banker, Christopher, captain of rangers, VIII., 602.

720

office of

VIII., 541.

the

623.

lock, bishop of, 910.

IV.,

Banyar, Mrs., death

;

an active friend of

;

Baptiste (Baptist), captain, a privateer in prison at Boston,

Sweden to the South

Bangor, doctor Herring, bishop

a,

;

attends the funeral of sir William John-

assists at

a return of, V., 777;

son, VII., 438. Banditti, transported from

thing like

Scott, ibid

Baptisms and burials, governor Burnet ordered

Bancroft, Edward, answers William Knox, VIII., 803.

Banishment from Bank of issue, an

;

New

dent in Baptism, a

829.

Bancker, Gerard, assistant clerk of the

VIII., 188

of,

shares the profits of his

Colden, 323

;

;

Morin

J.

VIII.,

863,

of land taken by, 923

government, 248; deprived of the

130, 147.

Bancker (Banokert), captain, II., 207; takes an English vesthe vessel restored which was taken by, sel, 268

182

sued by

;

on grants

biographical notice

(Sec Kanagcro.)

Banohaud (Banchot), Mr.,

Senecas, V., 797;

of

lieutenant-governor Colden bears testimony in favor

Bampfleld, Mr., V., 532.

Banagero.

of

province

321, 322, 323, 326; requests to be heard before the

Balveren, Mr.,

Banke

1-

705, 707, 708, 710, 711, 712, 779, 780, 781, 815, 841,

344.

Baltimore, [Charles Calvert 3d] lord, governor of Maryland, II.,

1

New Amstel, 119;

of

answer of the West India company thereto, 120 the Dutoh ambassador to England to be requested to mentioned, 138 attend to the controversy « Ith, 121 patent of, sought to I"' annulled, III., 23; >tli>( rmis the trade of Virginia, 25

1

219,

118; Instruots oaptain

II.,

1111am in

\\

articles against, .

Clabborn

oolonel

96;

i..

be repealed,

by, 02; argnmenl i",

from, 97;

life

of,

;

to

to,

II.,

at,

proceed against,

33S

;

ships arrive

reverend George Downing

captured by the Dutch, 518, 522

;

the

;

GENERAL INDEX.

58

— continuti.

Barbadoes

heirs

595

;

588

at,

Richard Morris retires

;

Lewis Morris removes to

in the Carribbees, 650

marriage

commander

New York 691

retires to,

of the forces in, 741

complaints in relation to the trade of the trade with, 182 to the fleet at, 183

removing

visions to, 212

elsewhere, 245

;

;

;

many

;

news

583, 585

negroes sold

from, 261

142;

nature

New York sends proin, may be removed 253

;

slaves brought

a vessel with provisions

;

364

to,

Mr. Rudyard goes

;

to,

England received from,

of the revolution in

a vessel arrives at

;

;

persons not in orders sent to exer-

plundered on her way 412

in,

176

of the inhabitants propose

cise the ministerial function at,

New York

lord Willoughby

;.

to, 175,

provisions sent from Boston

;

Boston from, 184;

to

;

major Andros

;

45; he acts tyrannically

of, III.,

to,

from, 619

a certain Englishman forges a

;

and

certificate

governor

to

Thomas Middle-

Constant Silvester and

of

towne reside

New York

from, 599

captain George McKenzie about going to, 614

;

to,

lost to the English, 651

supplied from the northern

;

636

colonies with provisions, 652, 653

rum from,

IV., 186

voy with ships bound at,

to,

;

257

;

in danger of being

;

New York imports

;

New

York,

1135;

934,

849,

member

of the

council

of

New

1137; his appointment approved, 1156; a commissioner in the case of the Mohegan Indians against the colony of Connecticut, 1178

1180

illegally to the council,

member 458

admitted

;

Frenchman, V., 106

a

;

-

r

governor Hunter's council, 124, 296,

of

attends a conference held with the Indians at

;

Albany, 657, 658, 661, 662, 664, 667^ dead, 856, 870.

Barber, Benjamin, captain in Shirley's regiment, X., 282. Barber, Francis, Barber, Luke,

III.,

409, 494.

member

of the

Maryland council,

94.

II.,

Barberie, Peter, V., 793, 794. Barberie.

(See St. Contest.)

Barbesieux, Louis Francois Marie le Tellier, marquis de, vi.

Barcelona, marquis de la Jonquiere taken prisoner near, X., 250.

Barclay, reverend Henry, notice of, VI., 88

the earl of Bellomont

drive

against, 315, 851

him

;

rector of Trin-

York, 314; complaint of the Mo-

New

church,

ity

hawks

a ketch enters at

IV.,

749,

examine lord Bellomont's accounts,

appointed

1090; York,

a frigate sent as a con-

296, 299, 302, 339, IX., 690;

681,

III.,

appointed to

minister of war, X.,

Casper

Hermans about escaping

sugar and

[Bar-

Barbarie (Barbarr, Barbary, Barberie), John, a merchant of

off their

Mohawks

the

;

land, 783

;

threaten to

acquainted with Mr.

Smith of Philadelphia, 912 writes remarks on Smith's History of New York, VII., 371 archbishop Seeker commends the remarks written by, 395 ; Dr. Johnson's ;

New Jersey

from, IV., 382

ships arrive every

;

month

New York from, 432 captain Glover sails from New York to, 446 difference in the price of New York and Pennsylvania flour in, 461 a part of

in winter at

;

;

;

captain Kidd's cargo sold

molasses very scarce

at,

at,

584

sugar,

;

600, 602

rum and

duplicate des-

;

patches from England to be sent by

way

601

of,

;

character of, 397

441, 451

application

;

made

for a degree for,

his remarks a basis for Dr. Smith's Vindi-

;

cation, 448

antecedents

;

451

of,

divinity conferred on, 454

;

degree of doctor of

;

his defense against Smith,

mentioned, 536, 566 his testimony in regard to reverend Myles Cooper, 538 had few Indians under him, ;

draws provisions from the American colonies, 725 Boston exports horses and its refuse codfish to, 790 .

mentioned, 817

;

Mr. Weaver about visiting, 827

lieutenant-governor of

Weaver

flies to,

862

;

New York

at,

857

;

;

an act

;

to establish

of real estate in, vetoed, 1188

;

to

trade

;

is

supply the

a credit for owners

;

;

a ship

bound

dies at,

175

to Philadelphia from,

number

;

Benjamin Furzer from Great

of ships cleared

in

Mohawk,

Barclay, Robert,

owns a

to,

V., 466;

;

church of Eng-

Barens, Lyntie,

II., II.,

498.

104.

601. 104, 105.

Barent, Goert, sells public property,

in, VII., 365, 366 instruction respecting the tenure of judges' commissions in, 479

Barents (Barentsen), Jan,

William Spry, governor of, 946 John Moore settles at, VIII., 197; heads of inquiry relative to, 388; viscount Howe, governor of, 751 governor Andros sends Frenchmen from New York to, IX., 129.

Barentse (Barentzen), Symon,

;

;

;

;

Barbara, a Spanish negress, sold in 31.

New

Netherland,

II.,

land on the Passaic river,

Bardineau, Jean, IX., 236.

Barens, Josuah,

Grenville, governor of, 756

Prayer

episcopal minister of Albany, VI.,

first

of, 616; trade between New York and, 686; court of exchequer in, founded on an ordinance, VI.,

Henry

tract of

88.

II.,

6;

superin-

Barclay (Barkly), reverend Thomas, allowance from England

of, IX.,

land established

;

Common

VI., 346.

Barelle, Jan de,

exports

of

Barclay, James, VI., 346.

Barege, springs

;

Book

VIII., 816.

value of the imports and

;

Britain 1714-1717 for, 615

to the society for

tends the publication of the

frequent opportunities

taken by a French privateer, 61

Smith sent

propagating the gospel in foreign parts, 592

New York to England by way of, V., from New England to, 31 imports into New

York from, 57

his defense against

the

of writing from

2

;

Mr.

certain duties to be applied to

the pay of soldiers in, 965

want of cash, and

absent

;

591

II.,

I.,

428.

54, 171, 180, 181, 182.

Barents (Barentzen), Meyndert,

II.,

II.,

249,

III., 74.

637, III., 74.

Barentse, Tys, magistrate of Staten island,

Barentsen, Harmen,

II.,

II.,

586.

189, 463.

Barentsen, Mathys, ensign at Svvaenenburg,

II.,

G27.

Barentz, Rynier, IV., 20. Barford, captain, abandons fort Ontario, VII., 126.

;

0ENERA1 INDEX

-Bar) q

d'Amonoourt, M. de, Frenoh ambai ledorat theoourt

of

London,

[II

B08,

605,

,

.ii

i

Hudson's bay

specting

807,

of oeutralll

\

ienl

v.,

608,

EX.,

to,

v

the [roqnol

drawn ap by

very, L98;

re-

209; Inatnxoted

,

III.,

.

Mend

a

,

seizure

de III.,

290.

Holland and sent

to

England,

Barnegat,

III.,

at

killed at

Lake George, VI.,

1007. Barns, captain, VIII., 735.

784 Barre,

among

the

85, 220.

292;

of,

271

of,

;

governor Dongan

consequences of his expedition,

ill

and of his course, 320

builds a vessel on lake

;

father Milet joins, 665

;

;

M

,

and other merchants of London, comWest India company, I., 71-81;

537

;

advances money

to

396, V.,

7

maob of If. de la Sal oommander Brookholl

Bd in Hi" Indian

34, 66, 228, 382.

Barker, Thomas, IV

letter of

frith the Iroquois,

miaaloner under the treat; of neutrality, 330. Barker,

about

.

Hudson's bay, 200

al

oom346; com

governor Dongan, 260, 313, 322,

I

ordered to pn

be Furnished the [roqnola, 226, 234; ordered to r

oonferenoe on th

holds

|

l"

-,

196; does not think

to request tke oeurl ef England to order thai do arms

plain

Ibid

.!,

IX.,

890,

Information

and, tV., 210;

ohanoellor Jefferies

I.,

;

1

at

Ticonderoga, X., 729.

;

notice

of,

166.

Barton, William, author of memoirs of David Rittenhouse, VII., 166.

Barton, lieutenant-colonel William, takes brigadier-general Prescott prisoner, VIII., 659. Bartouille,

lieutenant,

recommended

minister of war, X., 1056.

to

the notice of the

, ;

GENERAL INDEX.

60

Bartow, reverend John, signs an address to governor Hunter,

326; censures reverend Mr. Henderson, 354;

V.,

Bath (England), brigadier Hunter and family visit, V., 555; governor Pownall dies at, VI., 1009; baron de Dies-

kau

episcopal minister at Westchester, VI., 1018.

Bartwyck (Bartwic), captain, ohstructed in his voyage by the Dutch, II., 262 the Dutch ask for proofs of the fact,

the

Dongan

of

New

character of one of the officers of customs at

III., 403, 410; governor Dongan reports colimprudence to, 405 governor Dongan reimburses, 406 writes to governor Dongan

lector Santen's

Basford, John, IV., 934, 1006.

anomalies

in relation to the king's farm, 413

in, VII.

492

refers to, 414,

455.

Basse (Bass), Jeremiah, issues a proclamation asserting the

New

right of

some

438;

particulars

respecting,

551

pirates,

arrests

commons

the

1035.

the house of

petitions

;

against the earl of Bellomont, 605

;

reco-

vers damages for the seizure of the ship Hester, 777 his character, 778, 817, V., 205;

power

New

a seat in the council of

appointment, 966

;

recommended

Jersey, 965

;

Mr. Moor's good character, 1077; antecedents

New

of,

V.,

Jersey, 47, 155,

demanded, 256 intrusts the records Peter Sonmans, 348 surveyor of the

his removal

New

for

objections

bears testimony to reverend

34; secretary of the province of ;

;

was not in the

of the lords of trade to hinder his proceedings

in the case of the Hester, IV., 856;

to his

it

Jersey to

Batiskan, IX., 235 fears

777;

439,

advised of the shipment of certain

goods to England, 496.

Amboy,

Bellomont reports the disputes he has with,

earl of ;

his papers

;

clears a ship at Perth

;

;

governor Dongan

;

Batilly, ensign de, IX., 669.

Jersey to a port of entry, IV., 332, 380

governor of the Jerseys, 380, 542, 606 sent to England, 381

;

;

New York,

Basket's edition of the Laws of

of

ill

York,

270.

Baschy, count de, X., 965.

205

X., 682, 806.

at,

Bathurst, sir Benjamin, knight, advises governor

;

547

[Bae—

;

;

Batt,

provisions sent to Quebec from,X., 1030;

;

entertained

Henry,

III.,

that

the

land

English will

at,

193.

Batteau cove, X., 349. Batten

kill,

Battery, a,

IV., 391, VIII., 206; fort Clinton near, X., 79.

recommended

to be erected

on the point of

New

York, III., 87. Battle, of Bradock, Saltash, Launceston, Stratton and Modbury mentioned, II., 599. of Brandy wine.

(See Brandywine.)

where fought, X., 370, 926. of Bushy run. (See Bushy run.) of the Bicocque,

off

cape Finistere, referred

to, X., 121.

of Crevelt, count de Gizors mortally of Detroit,

wounded

at,

X., 696.

major Gladwin distinguishes himself

in,

resumes possession of the records, ibid; one of the reverend Mr. Talbot's

of Dettingen.

main props,

between the Dutch and Indians of Westchester county,

customs

at Burlington,

349

VII., 961; captain Dalyell killed in the, 962.

;

401.

Basserode (Bassenrok), chevalier de, recommended for the cross of St. Louis, X., 375;

546

;

wounded, 554,

commandant

751, 799

;

at Carillon,

defeats a party of

I.,

between the French and Senecas, rumors of

of the general committee of

Bastelaer, Goris,

I.,

II.,

Bastien, Bastile, a

577,

New

Netherland,

,

24, 33.

New

Nether-

383, 384, 913

(See Raef.)

II.,

Batesmans gut,

84, 85,90

III.,

;

of at,

first],

of the

at,

sir

1006

;

French

;

returns of the killed

Charles Hardy, 1013; French

X., 322, 335,

339,

342, 343, 366, 367,

loss at, 360, 380, 913 at,

of,

member

;

number

417, 418.

Long

island, major-general Grant in, X., 903.

of the Monongahela, an account of, X., 303, 366, 382

of the III.,

comxiv

;

privy council, 177, 360, 428, IV.,

;

sent to France, 310. of Quebec, X., 1039.

of Sillery, an account of, X., 1075, 1077, 1082 earl

mittee for trade and foreign plantations,

member

in, X., 903.

of Minas, X., 91.

VIII., 220.

Messrs.

719.

Bath [John Granville

and the Flat heads,

of Laprairie, III., 804, IX., 521, 522.

in the, IV., 210, 211.

638.

Heermans and Waldron have an audience with the governor and council of Maryland at the house of, 94. II.,

of,

of French regulars killed

New England man

103.

account

IX., 236.

Bastyaenssen, Michiel,

and wounded

killed

31.

and wounded sent to

Batavia, (East Indies,) Isaac Sears dies

Bateman, Mr.,

II.,

456.

II.,

five nations

Germantown, major-general Grant

of lake George, particulars respecting, VI., 390, 1003;

193.

Bastiaen, a Spanish negro, sold in

Bastiaensen, Jan,

their Indians, IV., 18.

VI., 390. of

Bastiaenssen, Martin, a privateer or pirate in I.,

and

New

York, VIII., 601.

land,

between major Schuyler's detachment and the French

between some of the

ibid.

member

Bassett, Francis,

;

plain, III., 815, 817.

from colonel Bouquet

Amherst, VII., 546; present in the battle

Bushy run,

426

between French and English Indians near lake Cham-

lish, 565, 570, 646.

of

a, III.,

description of the, 432, 446, 479, IX., 338, 365.

Eng-

Basset, Peter, naturalized, IV., 600. Basset, captain, bearer of despatches to general

(See Dettingen.)

187.

French

officers killed

and wounded

at,

;

list

of the

1084.

of Ticonderoga, particulars of, X., 723, 727, 735, 737, 741, 744, 747, 748, 752, 788, 809, 814, 847, 895, 922

and wounded

at,

727, 728. 750. 798

;

French

;

killed

loss

n,

;;

GENERAL

—BayI Battle

;•

M

r

— continued. 782;

Mnnmoht

Hi.- in-

1

tough!

Am. Tien, without

the French la

i>v

between

Dntoh and

the

Bngllsh

between an English frigai

ind ipirateship, IY., 662;

between the Triton prise and a French privateer, V., Batts,

Thomas,

21

an.

tori

65S

,

Quebec

.it

I'rmn Martinieo, X., 50,

Baudot, M., wounded, X., 430.

liav st. Paul, IX.,

Bay of

to, III.,

the five nations at fort

la

447; repels a party of

Barre's guards, 203

;

Bent

204; in the western country, 214;

la Salic,

ilc

At.

sent to seize fort St. Louis, 215

;

at fort St. Louis,

248

Quebec, 2G4.

to return to

\\

lieutenant-colonel, major



pari hai

of land

trait

betwei

477; the Frenoh war paiiy po

-

with Green baj

proposed

I

,

658

at,

\

portage

s

;

42; the Frenoh

Bayard, Balthazar,

366.

IX., 895

at,

186; assists in removing vice-director

Van

arbitrator

;

on the part of the Dutch in the differences with the sends a

;

governor Codding-

letter to

Van Tienhoven,

ton, 497; a great friend of secretary

Bayard, Mr., eaptain Of the John and Mary. V

of governor Dongan's

136,

423

;

Mr. Brucy

letter of

Andros' council, 543

;

to,

455

resigns his

one of

;

152; a

ordered to

;

council,

recommended

going to England, 417;

New England

373; sent to

for Bupplies,

II.,

473)

Ibid,

clerk of the council, 445; certifies as to the efforts

made by director Stuyvesant to obtain provisions from New England, 471 secretary to the council of war, 571, 573, 575, 578, 586, 589, 602

secretary

New

Jersey to be

governor Colve,

to

New Netherland, 613; lieu* member of governor Colve's

;

council, 687, 689, 694, 698, 701, 703, 704, 712, 714, 717, 720, 723, 727

;

signs a petition to governor

dros, 743; swears allegiance to the English,

An74

111.,

;

petitions against taking the oath of allegiance to the

English, 233

;

New

an alderman of

New

ber of the council of

York, 339

;

mem-

York, 417, 420, 543, 576,

III.,

46.

all

why

publicly read in the

revenue, 596, 608, 609

at

Albany,

at,

969

;

description

posed at, 1013. of Fundy, IX., 4, X., of Ganaouske.

1012

of,

;

a trading post pro-

New

is

a free place,

in, 410,

474, 487.

Nayack ; New Utrecht.) Bay du Nord called Hudson's bay,

404, 482; the

(See

Gravesend;

commissioner of the Albany, 596, 610, 615,

599

of,

;

New York,

598

617

;

;

of,

;

captain Leisler

604; suggests the

narrowly escapes with his

6M

;

;

letter of, to

letter of, to sir E.

narrative of occurrences in

An-

New York

in

endeavors to quell the rebellion at returns to

York, 637 one of his ;

655

abstract from the

extract of a letter from, 620

;

the earl of Shrewsbury, dros, 635

;

a popish dog, 601

;

New York,

letters

646

behavior

;

intercepted,

657,

New York

715 not to

acknowledge lieutenant-governor Leisler's authority, 658 desires to purchase the office of collector of the ;

port of

New

York, 661

;

683; committed to the IX., 781.

York,

his letters

;

595

threatens to imprison a brother

of,

II.,

New

retires to

fort, ;

orders the captains and soldiers at

(See Mexico.)

York, the,

letters of,

journal

New

.

(See Ganaouske.)

English arrive

;

1689, by, 636; 60.

appointed to pro-

611, 613; transmits captain Nicholson, a journal of

life,

the French build a fort

of Islands (Newfoundland), X., 60.

of Mexico.

645

New York,

to lieutenant-governor Nicholson, 598,

reduction of Canada, 612

so called, IV., 1089.

(See Niaouri.) ;

;

captain Nicholson sends for, 594;

Edmund

sir

Dutch convey the viceroy, his son and prisoners from the, I., 34.

Bombeaoure.

588

of,

592;

Saints, the

of Apalachee,

the Dutch church in favor

vide materials for fortifying the city of

the revolution in

of the Cayugas, IX., 838, 951

of

351;

;

the Jesuits

mayor

416

to the king,

command

;

417, 436, 437, 487; certificate of the minister of

III.,

593 a catholic, 640 mentioned, 410, 420, 426, 494, 718. ;

III.,

369,

Baxter, Morgan, IV., 936, 1008.

of

419.

,

Bayard (Bey art), NIoholas, olerh of Hie oounting bouse,

176, 204, 235, 238, 239, 245, 284

II.,

draw up representations against the Dutch,

Bay Bay Bay Bay Bay

1,

claims the Republic of England,

member

of

425,

ill.,

586, 685, 793, 796, 800, 814, 818, IV., 25, 33, 175,

Baxter, Jervas, carries despatches to England,

Bay Bay Bay

otrani e

t

498; mentioned, 550, 552, 555, 597, 599, 612; promagistrate of Gravesend, 154, 156, 159

Bay of

;

captured, 315.

tori al

612; receiver-general of

Dincklagen by force from the council, 456 English, 459, 460

(n

confounded

;

574, 587, 604, 651, 691, 71

II.,

tenant of militia, 670

X., 592.

I.,

635

II.,

658, 659, 661, 664, 665, 666, 667, 668, 673, 680, 688, 692,

Baxter (Backster), George, commands a party against the Indians,

478) an

recalled,

696, 697, 709, 711; the records of

III.,

D4WS

;

nd, VI.,

B

n

al

deposited with, 606;

(See Riviere au Bccuff.)

,

7

1

100,

Have

Baxter,

at, 8

203,

,

Bavea, Lewis, ensign, IV., 810.

Bawden (Bauden), John,

good Indian

;i

;

;

Skene accompanies, VIII.,

416; colonel Starke defeats, 806. river.

1

743, 749, IV., 1008.

Louis, 451, IX., 239,264;

St.

lieutenant of governor de

about

hostilities

frontiers of Virginia, Vll., 642.

Baugy, chevalier de, alluded

n

\t.

.

7!'

,

ha

Bern oaa river, IX., 781.

tie-

to, X.,

Banghj eaptain Thomas, transmits Information of th«'

men

omi

,

an

I

dian tradin

Baudoin, captain, arrivs

Baume,

ii

a tori

Tloonderoga, X., 750,

at

708.

to

\

HI., 198, 106.

Bandin (Dodln), Lieutenant, killed

on

i,

received In Quebec from, IX

784;

788,

fleets,

a

H., 572;

lleeta,

V

tor,

po

Indians, 750, naval, between the Dutch end French

)

counsel

for,

an armed force sent fort,

6*4;

to arrest,

William

Nicolls,

709; in prison and in irons, ibid, 716;



;

;

GENERAL INDEX. Bayard, Nicholas continued. exhibited in irons to terrify the people, 721; governor Sloughter demands the release of, 760 draws up an

tiers, IV., 14,

16

Albany, 38, 237

481

the right of the English over the five nations, 353

;

clerk in the secretary's office under the Dutch, ibid ;

to,

394

has his

;

;

his prosecution one of the articles

;

;

judge or jury for what they did on his

1032

trial,

411, 424, 620; reasons for his suspension, 399, 401

brings an action against the jury that found

absents himself from church through dislike of the

guilty,

earl of Bellomont, 416; further complaints against,

judgment

419

make

ordered to

;

New

a survey of the fort at

1066

1044,

against,

New

in

repealed, 1112

for his

440

life,

;

439

his lordship will

;

be tried

is liable to

;

before the lords of trade, 467

New

of time in

of,

York, 469

;

;

length

under the Dutch and English government, ibid

at the dissatisfaction of the

cher, 473

;

pamphlet transcribed by

mont determined Demyre of 514 523

raised in

plain

of,

566

distributed

;

grant,

;

Mohawks com-

gets

up a

petition

a merchant of New Abraham de Peyster, one of the judges of, amount paid by, to governor Fletcher for his

against the earl of Bellomont, 612

York, 624 ;

the

785

York, 796

;

;

reports the condition of the fort at

;

;

New

to,

813

part of the

;

;

;

at the

;

;

proves the

105

;

in de-

;

of Jacob Leisler, 104

petitions for the liberation of alderman

;

ins, ibid

of the

;

manding the execution

Messrs. Attwood and

Weaver

;

dead,

Hutch-

called

on

to

answer the petition of Hutchins and, 107 Skohare, the extravagant grant to, 167 one of the committee of the council on fees, 216. ;

;

Bayard, Pr., IV., 938. Bayard, Samuel, signs a petition to king William, IV., 935

;

answer certain charges, 950, 957; signs an address to lord Cornbury, 1007. Bayard, Samuel, junior, deputy secretary of New York,

under

bail to

VIII., 760, 761

;

mentioned, 802.

Bayard, Samuel Vetch, appointed surveyor and searcher of the port of

New

York, VIII., 716.

Bayard, Stephen, recommended for a seat in the council of New York, VI., 261, 278, 288 member of the coun;

cil,

;

ing the death of the earl of Bellomont, 848

sen-

particu-

New York, 74 the Dutch head New York, 103 foremost

English party in

colonel Smith opposes the breaking of the

Mohawks' land included in the extravagant grant to, 822 brother-in-law of widow Cortland, 846 letter of, to sir Philip Meadows reportgrant

was considered extravagant, 16

ernment of

extravagant

up of Leisler's New York to be sent

soldiers, 588

;

constant dependence of the five nations on the gov-

the earl of Bello-

his extravagant grant proposed to be

;

among the

it

why

lord Cornbury transmits to

purchase of his extravagant grant, V., 10

lars of the

why

;

act touching the case of, 1166

England the

524; endeavored to hinder the proclamation of

their majesties at Albany, 525

be

report of the lords of trade on the

ceedings ordered to be amended, 1140;

to break the extravagant grant to,

money

;

;

tenced to death, 1150

;

to

1123; the bill declaring the illegality of those pro-

his

disturbed at the taking

;

bones, ibid

777

;

ought

surprised

Ulster county brother-in-law of, one of governor Fletcher's sycophant council-

lors,

to,

;

grant to,

the attor-

an electioneering

a son of, 509

the

;

attorney-general Northey's opinion

;

;

his complaints against the earl of

grant to, vacated, 510, 528, 714

;

;

the opinion of the

;

act declaring the illegality of the proceedings against,

Indians with governor Flet-

Bellomont favorably received, 490

;

;

1064, 1168

York, 1071

against, 1118

denies that governor Fletchpr influenced

;

the council, 480

519

472

of,

him

passed to reverse the

is

evidence in Fletcher's case, 469, 472, 483 ney-general drew the patent

act

of the act declaring the illegality of the proceedings

employment

in public

an

;

attorney-general on the actions brought by, received

York, 421; goes to England, 427, 508; the earl of Bellomont's inveterate enemy, 428

not reply to the answer

trial

;

suspended from the council, 395, 398,

;

lord Cornbury

Atwood and Thomas Weaver, 1011, 1013 several papers received from England relating to, 1017 order reversing the sentence on Hutchins and, 1023, 1025 cannot sue either

extravagant grant, IV., 392; evil consequences of the grant

;

963

of complaint against chief-justice

quit-rent received on his

651;

of,

lord Cornbury reports the irregularities

;

in the case of, 974

;

extent of the extravagant grant to,

V., 22,

780,

961

of,

ordered to report on the case printed, 972

a

New

appeal from the proceedings in

to

against him, 961, 962; order of the queen in

council admitting the appeal

advises the printing of a

;

his statement in support of

;

admitted

;

York

broker in obtaining protection for

malicious pamphlet, 315

a Jacobite, 380

957

attends a meeting of the Indians at

;

;

pirates, 308, 387, 457,

391,

ney-general Broughton indicted for not prosecuting,

accompanies governor Fletcher to the fron-

;

opinion of

the warrant against, IV., 954; reprieved, 956; attor-

to lieutenant-governor Leisler's letter to the

king, 766

;

the attorney-general of England on the validity of

;

answer

[Bat—

to death, 953, 955, 959, 972, 974, V., 106

head

330;

suspended, 404, 407, 408, 411, 413, 414,

427, 465, 679.

committed on a charge of Bayard, William, member of the council, III., 813, 837. an account of his Bayde, George, exchanged, X., 881. persecution by the Leislerians, 946 memorial of Bayeul, M. de, at the siege of fort Necessity, X., 262.

of a conspiracy, 942, 943

high treason, 945

;

;

his letter giving

;

Messrs. Adderly and particulars

of the

Lodowick in behalf

of,

949

proceedings of the government

against himself, his son and captain llutchins, 950, -957; letter of, to the lords of trade, 951; sentenced

Bayeux, Thomas, VIII., 455. Bayles, John,

Bayly,

,

VI.,

II.,

601.

justice of the peace at Westchester,

8.

New

York,

;

Ill-

GENERAL INDKX.

x I

Bayly, lieutenant-ooh

sending him

i

to

vn

Introduced

tte),

into

the

,

oi

•177;

len

ih

loe,

for

(

ii

as a proper place for StUx America, \., L6; vessels .mum al Quebec

from, 129, l~i at, 31

l ;

despatches from

;

;

oape Chat,

:it

ii"< ;

returns to

Queliee, 71.

Beach, reverend John

recommended by doctor Johnson

,

bishop Sherlook, VI., 910

to

publishes an answer to

;

Mr. Eobart, 914; ohargedwitb preaching false doctrines, 711.,

346

reverend doctor Johnson writes

j

preface to a book

taken

&c,

published

sermon

at a

of,

.'>71

;

i>y, :>7t>

;

muob

a

offense

author of a 7indication,

of the professors of the church of England, 394

new

-

hi

;

I..



main

at,

ezay

ai,

populous

I

nr..

ih.

..i

to,

17.

1",

a

Mr. Ger54,

pi

h

of

the

news of

Howe

ad

Mi

ateer es peot
i

at

expulsion

deserters arrive

1-1

at,

supplies

;

a\

si

Mr.

ibid;

arrives

I-'

to,

L56; reinforcements arrive at,

the English erect a fort

burnt, 216;

91; and

to,

Germain

near, 92; reverend Mr.

Quebec from,

the expul-

from,

received

61

at,

foi

Minas Benl

from

English

their

killed

U

127;

18,

1

revi n

rend Mr. Germain Leaves, 71; orders sion

aewi

164;

.7.

56,

i'"i.

B9,

64;

at,

Bn

..i

50,

49,

68,

hand

In thi

;

hi

15

13,

1-,

17, :.:;,

remain

I

i.

i

Quebec from,

nl

a

north-

.

at,

IT*;

2

retracts what he had published, 404; preaches in defense of the Trinity, 439; his conduct approved, 448; preparing an answer to a pamphlet published

Fori Law Fort Beaubassin Beauclerc (Beauclair), captain de, wounded at Ticonderoga,

against the ohurob of England, 516

Beaucourt (Beaucour, Beaucours, Brancour), Dubois Berteh.t .le, employed in fortifying Three Rivers, IX., 519

517, 519; reve-

rend doctor Johnson's Opinion.of his answer tn The enjoyed by conforming to the church

real advantages

of England, 53G

book, 566

;

;

doctor Seeker has not received his

book sent

a copy of his

to doctor Seeker,

591.

Beachy Head, engagement between the Dutch and French fleets off, II., 572.

Beadle, Jacob, in

New

makes

under the Elizabethtown right

Jersey, VI., 348.

New

from

Netherland,

,

New

a soldier in the

665.

Jersey company, X., 592.

Bearch, Thomas, of Boston taken by the Dutch, 664.

for educating Indian children, VII., 167;

mentioned,

dead, 496.

;

Iroquois, 534;

enga

.".:;") ;

Onondagas,

tie-

650; a party of Indians become panic stricken under, 764; Quebec fortified according to the plan of, 871; 1065

1063,

;

forwards news

from Albany to Quebec, 1109, 1110; X., 98 delegation of Senecas to Quebec, 25 sends

ment

in pursuit of a party of Iroquois,

the defense of the frontiers, 94

Crown

103

;

sends a

;

a detach-

81,

102;

adopts measures for

sends reinforcements

;

Point, 101; transmits

news from the west,

reports the settlement of Indians at St. Regis,

105 ; and an attack near St. Anne, 108 further reports from, 109, 114, 116, 121, 122; requests leave to ;

furnish some western Indians with an escort, 149.

Beaudicourt, M.,

commandant

the lake of

at

Two Moun-

tains, X., 87.

Indians destroy the house

,

tie-

Quebec, 561, 858, 860; serves against

to

663,

II.,

Bearcroft, reverend Philip, D. D., calls attention to a plan

395

against

prisoners surrendered to, 82;

prisoner at Northfield, X., 51.

Bear, a tribe of the five nations so called, IV., 736, VI., 15.

Beard,

;

commands an expedition aets with much prudence,

;

II.,

Beaman (Bemant), John, taken Bear,

.

X., 750, 799, 1084.

governor of Montreal,

a claim

Beado, Francis, sentenced to be branded, and to be banished

Beam,

;

adia, X,,

\.

ii

:i

in

Bazire, Mr., IX., 118, 21G.

II,

i

menl

several vessels from, missing, 718.

Basin (Barin), Mr,, X., 42, 46

M

i.

fori at,

b

Isboui

l

li.it

French war party withdrawn from, 17-,

tin-

ern limit of

711.

11.,

a

Ol

148

i>,

328.

BngU

i\

.

">

Bayonne, recommended Mi

762;

766,

121

,

King's oollege, New

Bayly, Bamuel, |ustloe for Queens oounty, V ..

64

Introduction to Ian

guagea, literarj and philosophical, for hi.

Bouffonne,

(See Baglty.)

1.

Baylv [Anaelxn, LL. D.], author of an

of, IX., 614.

Beaufort [Francois de Vendome], duke de,

Mr., X., 810.

memoir

of,

II,

351.

Bearskins, duty in Holland on,

I.,

Beaufort [Henry Somerset, 2d], duke

572.

of,

member

is sent back to Canada from Albany, privy council, III., 357, 360, 362. VI., 526; sent to New York and Boston to treat for Beaufremont, M., commander of the West India an exchange of prisoners, 564, 565; X., 209; will at Louisboug, X., 572.

of the

Beaubassin, Hertel de,

not be allowed to go among the VI., 567;

New York

Indians,

reports on the state of fort Anne, IX.,

1101; reconnoitres fort Saratoga, X., 148; leads a

war party

to the

neighborhood of Albany, 159

;

ac-

companies chevalier de Niverville on a war party, 172

;

in

command on

Iroquois,

IX.,

535,

602;

serves on

board

at

Quebec, X.,

arrives

75.

Beauharnois, Charles, marquis de, governor of Canada, V., remonstrates against the 827, VI., 90, 91; IX, vii ;

erection of fort Oswego, V., S27, IX., 996;

that place, V., S2S

;

complains

ot

the

summons

commandant

at

Oswego, VI., 90, 91, 94; correspond, nee between

lake Superior, 424, 482.

Beaubassin, La Valliere, accompanies an expedition against the

Beauharnais, chevalier de, arrives

fleet,

la

president Clarke and, 92, 93

be

made over

to,

131

;

;

Tierondequat about to

endeavors

to recover

English



;;

GENERAL INDEX.

64 Beauhamois, Charles

continued.

739

prisoners from the Indians, 488

empowered

;

to grant

licenses for the Indian trade, IX., 954; instructions to, 956,

count de Maurepas, 968,

letters to

964; his

[Beahis letter to the secretary of state, 740

;

XIV. writes

the Abenakis to Canada, 759

attracts

1069, 1095, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1109, 1111, X.,

to the minister

;

New York

governor of

to the

from the governor of New York

1, 3, 19,

from, IX., 969

970

to,

;

instructed

;

to sustain the Abenaquis, 989, 1002; requested to stay

the attacks of the English, 990

on the subject of Oswego, 999 regarding Oswego, 1010

1014

ibid,

1025

his further intentions

abstract of his despatches,

;

banishes John Lidius from Canada, 1019

;

recommends the 1021, 1022

abstract of his letters

;

;

ordered to erect a fort at

;

1027

calls for additional troops,

;

Crown Crown

erection of a fort at

Point,

opens a cor-

;

New York,

respondence with governor Montgomerie of 1029

asks permission to send Indians to the court of

;

France, 1030

reports that fugitives from justice are

;

protected in religious houses, 1031

nese on the Ohio, 1033, 1035

;

settles the

;

state of the public defenses,

Shaw-

1044

;

ordered to attend to

;

recommends

of that lake, 1059 five nations,

1065

;

;

ordered to have a survey

an address of the Indians

1074

1075

to,

sage to the Indians of the lake of the

1076

his address

;

1072

his

;

answer

of Sault St. Louis, 1073,

message of the Senecas

;

made

reports the state of his government,

to the Indians of Michilimakinac,

to

re-

and

his answer to the address of the

;

honored with a new grade, ibid

;

;

the building a sloop on

sends a mes-

;

Two

Mountains,

answers of Indians to his messages, 1079, 1080, his Indian name, 1082; his answer to

;

who

is

Beaujeu, Daniel Lienard de, assists at a conference with Indians held at Quebec, X., 187, 188

Duquesne, 300 310

;

914

killed, 304, 338, 382, 528,

;

arrives at fort

;

sent against general Braddock, 303, ;

notice

366

of,

M. Dumas succeeds, 410. Beaujeu de Villemonde, Louis Lienard de, sent with despatches for the duke d' Anville, X., 75

;

returns to

Quebec, 108. Beaujeu, M. de, at Michilimakinac, X., 853.

Beaujon, M., commandant at Niagara, VI., 592. Beaulac, lieutenant de, stationed at Chambly, X., 36. Beaulieu, lieutenant de, IX., 236.

Beaumanoir.

reports the

ports the condition of things at forts Frontenac

lake Champlain, 1050

from governor de Vaudreuil and, 761

for, 912.

Beaumenis, captain, wounded, X., 431.

1040; holds

the defense of the upper part of the colony, 1047

Niagara, 1049

be provided

New York, ;

joint letter

;

Sieur Begon advises, in relation to a prisoner

his vigilance approved,

1037; agrees on neutrality with

a conference with Onondagas, 1041, 1086

1069

;

Point,

presides

;

meeting on the subject of Detroit, 744;

at a general

1018, 1019, 1026, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1035, 1038, 1068,

27, 36

Louis

;

742; prevails on the Indians to attack

to,

the English in the direction of Boston, 743

(See Duclos.)

Beaumont, captain de, IX., 236. Beaumont, ensign, serves on board la Bouffonne, IX., 643. Beaumont, Sibastin, captain of German fuzileers, VIII., 602 major in the United States army, 786. ;

Beaumont (Canada), the English land

X., 995, 1019

at,

general Wolfe's proclamation affixed to the church

;

at,

996.

Beaunny, M. de, a prisoner in the Boston government, IX., 857.

Beauport, population

of,

in 1666,

tioned

at,

57; sir William Canadian militia sta-

IX.,

Phipps' troops land near, 457

;

X., 993; the English expected to land

at,

996 the troops march to the heights of Abraham from, ;

1003

camp formed

;

1081, 1082;

camp

the message of the Senecas, 1083; discountenances

tioned

at,

1020

abandoned, 1041

at,

at,

;

engagement

;

at,

1029

;

the Montreal militia sta-

1061.

an expedition against Oswego, 1085 explains some Beaupr6, population of, in 1666, IX., 57; captain du Tilly misunderstanding between the Indians of the Sault commands the militia of, 235 M. de Courtemauche and of the Two Mountains, 1095 reports the state of the English land effects a retreat by way of, X., 995 ;

;

;

Indian

Crown

affairs,

1097,

Point, 1101

;

his

1099

;

news from

recommendations in regard

to

reports news from Albany, and from Detroit and Niagara, 1111 advised

the public defenses, 1103

1109

;

transmits

;

;

;

of the projects of the English, X., 11

exchange of prisoners, 19

;

;

proposes an

holds a conference with

at,

997

and burn, 1000, 1033, 1058.

;

Beausadel, lieutenant, killed, X., 1085. Beausejour, the French fort

at,

to be destroyed, VI., 921,

922, X., 296, 416; erected, 263, 291 315,

358,

365,

a burden, 496

;

493;

381,

;

captured, 314,

English force

the English strengthen, 547

at, ;

359;

capitula-

some of the five nations, 22 sends reinforcements tion of, violated, 632 necessity of retaking, 691. prevails on the Indians to take Beausier, captain, commands the frigate Heros, X., 416 to Crown Point, 52 up the hatchet, 77; prisoners delivered to, 83; apsails from Quebec, 476. points M. de Rigaud to Crown Point, 99 an exchange Beausoleil. (See Brosard.) of prisoners proposed to, 114; commodore Knowles Beautiful river, the English expelled from the, VI., 532 promises him to send the French prisoners to France, the Indians on, dependent on Pennsylvania, 545 ;

;

;

;

;

125

;

orders lenient measures to be used towards the

Indians, 182

;

sends M. de

St.

Pierre to Michilimakinac,

183.

the, 610

;

;

unable to furnish canoes,

at,

548

;

commandant on

the,

841

French claim the lands on the, 842. (See Belle Ohio river.)

;

the Ohio called

taken possession of by the French, 732

captain Contrecoeur

Beauharnois (Beauharnais), Francois de, appointed intendant of Canada, IX., 736

reception of captain Celoron

;

;

the

rividre

;

5

;

;

GENERAL INDEX.

-Bbb]

65

Beauvai Albnn,

L049.

duke

Beauvilllers,

Beaver

i

Beevei

de, tX., 271.

oppo

lieut

|,

Becki

i

e

'"

i

!

Fi

,

771,772,

HI., 137, II..

22J

by

seized

i

;

trade

:

Hudsoi

th In

73, 74, 75, 76,

i

nations, ir ious

times, 78,

63

on, 189, 212, 129, 572, 555,

204, 210,

.

the Schuylkill,

a


nations, 802;

b^s

Lotbio

tl

198; governor

197,

761;

756,

issioners appointed

with the

X.,

543,

to,

VI.,

90fl

reporl

the

orders for an exohan

;

senl

rs

New Jersey,

of

n

t,,

dm

English

ork on the Bubjeol

^

boundaries, VI., 143; governor Clarke writes

Monti

..f ii.-

writes to the

Beloher Jonathan,' governor of Massaohusetl

same

to

stores to be

1

captain de

.,!

.1.

Hon

.!

\i

i

Boston

In

I

..pinion

IV., 722;

writes to,

T

ommis

I

with the [ndl

a

the expedition against Canada,

1

|.i..\

hip Bwan, pur-

of th
'2,

39,

(Pennsylvania),

II.,

settler

a

New

592,

near

72:;,

fort,

454, 458.

Moravians

Wood

creek

;

I.

New York,

of

IV.,

1186,

bis character, 357.

New York,

1135.

Bicoque. (See Baltic.)

commands

Biddle, captain Nicholas,

live at, a

Andrew

Mo

Bienville, Francois le

detachment

(Washington county,

the United States brig,

Doria, Vlll

apaniea the expedition

against Schenectady, IX., 466;

728.

seven leagues from

J

[X., 6]

Bickley, William, IV., 936; merchant of

York), VII., 615.

Beversreede,

I

X., 170.

an attack on his garrison at

Bidaud, Francois, IX., 804.

255.

carried prisoner to Niagara from, X., 588.

Betts, Richard,

Beunios,

minor son,

in

fail

(New Hampshire),

May,

IV., 810.

Indians cheated out of, VII., 331;

VI., 345; the

man

New RocheUe, Dw Chaj)

complains of the guardians of

Kiliaen van Rensselaer's

Bethlehem (Bathleem)

(See

168.

Indians

river

i

i

tl

war, 174.

.") ,

1

7

;

commands an Indian

killed, 518.

Bienville, Jean Baptiste le

Moyne

de, reports hostile feelings

of the English of Carolina towards the French, IX., fort

Christina,

361;

I.,

925;

as

.

926; governor of Louisiana,

on the Schuylkill, 542, 588, li., 137; the Swedes referred to, 1067. any plantations to be made between fort Els- Bienville de Celoron. (See Celoron.) borgh and, I., r>89 sale of the lands on the Schuyl- Biesman, Mr., member of the states general, I., 10. kill signed at, 593; Adriaen VanTienhoven commisBigamy, Ralph Doxy accused Of, II., 691; David Jamison sary at, 594; names of Inhabitants at, 595. accused of, IV., 400, 429; instanc 9 of, in Canada, built

:

forhid

;

Beverly, commissioners from the parliament attend

IX., 68.

I

Big Beaver river, general Parsons drowned

at, I., 130.

Bevert, Hendrick,

1!.,

44.

Bevesier, an English vessel recaptured from the II.,

,oe,

Dutch

off,

in, VIII., 736.

Cayuga sachem. (See Skahyonisio.)

Big Cove creek, VII., 281. Bigeau, Arnaud, outlawed, X., 155; returns to Acadia, 16S.

527.

Bigelow, Timothy, taken prisoner, VIII., 664.

Beveys, Claude, IV., 1007.

Beyn, Harmsen,

II.,

Big Fish, a

475.

Boys, reverend Henricns, signs an address to governor ter,

a

v., 326; censures reverend Mr. Hendei

Hun-

.Mohawk

chief, killed, X., 122.

Big Head, an Ottawa chief, Bigot, Francois, IX., 335, 906, 973, 97-V

X..

Bianco, Elie, IV., 935.

attendant of Cape Breton,

Bibiribe river,

capitulation of Loulsbourg to count

I.,

155.

10

1.

8;

sends copy of the

:

;;

GENERAL INDEX.

74 Francois

— continued.

explains the cause of the loss of Louisbonrg, 15

;

tendant of the duke

Che-

houctou, 72 85, 86

;

d' Anville's fleet, arrives at

move

in-

arrives at Quebec, 177

of occurrences in Canada,

;

transmits a journal

&c, 179

pense of the new road to La Prairie, 180

assists at a

;

conference with the Indians, 186, 188, 345, 445, 500

in favor of the proposed settlement at Os-

;

wegatchie, 204

M. Rouill6, 218

letter of, to

;

render of fort Necessity announced

until the arrival of, 279

305

;

;

the Abenakis, 615

Bigot, reverend Jacques, S.

Breton refuses to obey, 371

confides in M. Doreil, 394 apprehends a scarcity of provisions, 416 ; victuals the

military matters, 373

;

expedition for Oswego, 411

;

expedition, 464; ordered to

makes advances for restrict officers and

;

mix

obliged to

497; encourages gambling, 551, 685 continuance of

hostilities,

;

oats in bread,

opposed to the

preparing his re-

reports the expenses incurred

quisitions, 651, 652;

in Canada, 666;

631

;

pri-

complains of

vates to the simple ration, 489, 493;

want of provisions, 491

that

commended,

the marquis de Puiseux, 685

671, 1079; cousin of

;

promises to vindicate

the marquis de Montcalm, 686 advances money to M. de Montcalm, 6S7 endeavors to restore good un-

to

;

mother of

the marquis de Puisieux, ibid. Bigot, reverend Vincent, S.

Thomas,

J.,

IX., 440.

codfish exported from Boston to, IV., 790.

does not meddle with

;

;

440.

M. Varin to act

Machault, 364; M. Prevost of Cape

papers to M.

J., IX.,

Bigot, Louise, marries count de Sillery, X., 685

Bilboa (Bilboe), news of the peace received from,

sends supplies to Louis-

;

he

to Acadia, 630, 676.

;

Bigs,

forwards some of general Braddoek's

;

1126;

of the vessel

the sur-

;

;

actively engaged in Canada,

at Montreal, 309, 310

bonrg, 315

;

France,

for

name

;

about to

260

to,

return to Canada, 276, 277, 278, 280

sails

ibid

sailed in, 1127.

endeavors to secure the beaver trade for Canada, 199, 200, 202

of,

Bigot, reverend father, missionary at Sillery, IX., 354

to report the ex-

;

papers, 1118;

his

biographical notice

his relationship towards M. de Pean,

;

[Big-

himself and suit to France, 1110; and liberty to re-

706.

II.,

Bilder, Pieter,

II.,

III.,

162;

II.,

5S6,

193.

Biljou (Billjouw), Peter, schout of Staten island,

694

;

ordered to give notice of any arriving vessels,

629

;

a commission

appointed to investigate com-

plaints against, 681. Billerika, the Indians attack, IV., 192. Billiard,

reverend Robert Jean Baptiste, S.

J.,

notice of,

X., 301. Billingsly,

May,

91.

II.,

221

;

captain, 240

;

Billop (Bellop), Christopher, lieutenant of foot, desires to give

up

his commission, 239

;

III.,

dismissed the service, 276; angry with Sir

Edmund

Andros, 284; about to

350; his

king, 365 Billop's point,

;

sell his plantation,

Amboy, 356;

plantation opposite

petition of, to the

order thereupon, 366.

III.,

395.

(See Currency.)

Bills of credit.

;

Bimant.

(See

Bcaman.)

;

de Vaudreuil and M. de Montcalm, 810, 858 writes to the minister on that subject, 812 a copy of the New York Gazette sent derstanding between «M. ;

;

increases the allowance

830;

to,

the

to

military

886, 902; letters received in France from, sends 'despatches to France, 923 letter of M.

officers,

906

;

;

minister of the colonies, to, 937;

Berryer,

circulated in France to the discredit of, 939 fidence placed in,

960;

961

;

to shift responsibility,

his connections, 962, 965 ;

at

letter to

M. Berryer

on the approach of the

English, 972, 993; requisitions

camp

;

reports the estimated expenses for the

year, 1759, 967; his efforts

the

no con-

appears occupied only in

amassing wealth, ibid; seeks from, 966

;

stories

made

by, 973; visits

Beauport, 996; required to vote on the

question of capitulating, 1007

;

votes in favor of thai

measure, 1008; votes to attack the English, 1022,

Bineteau (Binneteau), reverend Julien, notice

Bingen, Thomas, II., 180. Binghamton, Chugnut opposite, VII., 50

Binkhurst, admiral,

III.,

213.

Binnewitz, commander.

ports operations Supplies, 1067

paid

in

J

France,

with, 1101

;

before

Quebec,

pilots,

H'-il

;

holds out hopes that his 1099:

Abbadie, M. d\ X., 1161. Abercrombie, lieutenant-colonel James, VII., 160. Abercromby, general James, VII., 345. Acrelius, reverend Isaac, VII., 168.

Addington, Isaac, IV., 426. Auguste Augustin

Affry, Louis

Albemarle, William

Alexander, William, IX., 981. 582.

Amherst,

sir Jefl'ery, VII., 548.

be

reports the approach of the English on

capitulation,

III.,

want of

iii

1109; allowed a vessel to convey

earl of, X., 217.

Alexander, James, V., 982.

Thomas,

hills will

d', X., 657.

Anne Keppel,

Allen, sir

Montreal, 1103; allowed to remain in Montreal after its

(See Binckes.)

1050; re-

chevalier de Levis satisfied

name

Biographical notices

Allaz, James, X., 731.

1048; reports the ignorance of the

Indian

Binyem, John, X., 883.

Allen, reverend James,

Canada,

;

(See Minuit.)

suggestions in regard to certain

in

567;

IX.,

of, 67.

104O; his good fortune and character, 1045; submits offices

of,

missionary to the Abenaquis, 570.

Andros,

sir

II.,

Edmund,

274.

knight,

II.,

740.

Anstruther, William, VIII., 311.

Anthony, Allard,

II.,

43.

Anville, N. de la Rochefoucauld,

duke

Apthorp, Charles Ward, VIII., 765.

d', X., 73.

GENERAL INDEX.

-Bio] Biographloal notloei

\i 'gem "ii,

Bom

continwd,

Apthorp, reverend Bui

Pierre Marc de Voyer, count

Arlington, Henrj Bennet, ear]

Arran, Rlohard Butler, curl

Ashnrst,

Bouqui

773.

,

mi- ii.iii

\

d,

X., 29.

U

of,

i,

Henrj

261

,

An(

de,

X

,

Aubcn, reverend, Joseph,

Bourdon, Bienr, Bradley, Rlohard, VI., Bradstreet, John, \'in

IX., 880.

Francois Louie do rourroy

Brattle,

James, vin

Brid

Christopher,

[e,

John, V.,

Li

Aubry, oaptain, X., 901. Auokland, William Eden,

17. .

,

r.

17.',.

Broughton, Thomas, VI., 91. 1st lord, VIII., 763.

Axtell, William, VIII., 269.

Brown, lieutenant John, X., 1097. Browne, honorable Arthur, VII., 846. Browne, reverend Arthur, VII., 537.

Baboook, Henry, X., 731. Bailie, Alexander, X 731.

Browning, William, X., 730.

,

Balneaves, Patrick, X., 720.

Brudenell, honorable James, VI., 97.

Baltimore, Cerilius Calvert, 2d lord,

II.,

74.

Bruyas, reverend Jacques, IX., 720.

Banynr, Goldsbrow, VIII., 188.

Buell, revereoj Samuel, VIII., 693.

Barclay, reverend Henry, VI., 88.

Bullit,

Barnsley, Thomas, X., 731.

Burrington, George, V., 935.

Barre, Isaac, X., 1027.

Burton, Ralph, VII., 93.

Thomas,

VIII., 395.

(See Ormond.)

Butler, James.

IX., 167.

la,

L24.

Braddook, Edward, X 502.

of, II.,

Aubertviere, righl reverend

Barre, Lefebvre de

l

M

\

d', IX., 17.

Ivaugour, Dubois, baron

de l\ l\..

1

v., 771.

l

,

75 William, n

Bongalnvllle, Loul

VII.,

Arbuthnot, Mariot, yiii

i,

Wildman, 2d viscount, X., 537. Barton, reverend Thomas, VII., 166. Beaufort, Francois de Vendome, duke de, II., 351. Harrington, William

(Sue Arran.)

Butler, Richard.

Byllinge, Edward,

III.,

285.

Caldwell, John, VIII., 509.

Beauharnois, Charles, marquis de, IX., 956.

Calvert, Philip,

Beaujeu, Daniel Lienard de, X., 366.

Campbell, Donald, VII., 9G3.

Bechefer, reverend Thierry, IX., 169.

Campbell, Duncan, X., 728.

II.,

73.

Beckwith, John, VII., 58.

Campbell, John, of Duneaves, X., 728.

Bedford, John Russell, 7th duke

of,

Bedford, William Russell, 4th duke Belleisle, Charles Louis

VI., 713.

Campbell, John, of Strachur, X., 728.

of, I., 127.

Campbell, lord Neil,

Auguste Fouquet, duke de, X.,

III.,

408.

Campbell, lord William, VIII., 174. Carheil, reverend Etienne de, IX., 227.

527.

Bellomont, Richard Coote, earl

Carteret, sir George,

II.,

Belmont, reverend, Francois Vachon de, IX., 720. Benckes, Jacob, II., 579.

Carteret, Philip,

607.

Benzel, Adolphus, VIII., 140.

Cats, Jacob,

Berkeley, lord George,

Cavendish, lord William,

Berkeley, lord John,

II.,

II.,

of,

IV., 851.

562.

599.

Berkeley, Norbonue, VIII:, 260.

II.,

410.

Cathcart, Charles, 8th lord, VI., 186. I.,

541.

Chapman, Benjamin,

II.,

562.

VIII., 4S2.

Chevert, lieutenant-general Francois de, X., 577.

Bernieres, reverend Henri de, IX., 93.

Cholmondeley, honorable Robert, VIII., 454. Clare, Robert Nugent, 1st viscount, VII., S99.

Berry, John,

Clarke, George, IV., 1069.

Berkeley,

sir

William,

II.,

II.,

274.

576.

Berryer, Nicholas Rene de, X., 936. Bigot, Francois, X., 1126. Billiard,

reverend Robert Jean Baptiste, X., 301.

Claus, Daniel, VIII., 815. Clinton, admiral George, VI., 475. Clinton, sir Henry, VIII., 717.

Binetean, Julien, IX., 567.

Clinton, general James, VIII., 806.

Bird, John, VIII., 705.

Cochrane, Gavin, X., 730.

Blaauw, Johannes,

II.,

200.

Colbert, Jean Baptiste,

II.,

348.

Blake, Nathan, X., 43.

Colden, Alexander, VIII., 221.

Blake, Robert,

Colden, David, VIII., 323.

I.,

579.

(See Seignelay.)

Blakeney, William, lord, VI., 170. Blathwayt, William, V., 507.

Colden, Richard Nicholls, VIII., 511.

Block, Simon,

Colville, David, lord, VII., 806.

II.,

267.

Colgan, reverend Thomas, V., 973.

Blunt, Harry, VIII., 684.

Conway, major-general Thomas,

Bolton, Mason, VIII., 724.

Cooke, William, X., 728.

VIII., 730.

GENERAL INDEX.

76 Biographical notices

— continued.

[Bio-

Duch6, reverend Jacob, VII., 411.

Cooper, reverend Myles, D. D., VIII., 297.

Dudley, Joseph,

Cornbury, lady Katherine, IV., 1183.

Dudley, William, IX., 941.

Cornwallis, Charles, 1st marquis

364.

III.,

Courtin, Antoine,

II.,

336.

Dunbar, Thomas, VI., 915, X., 566. Duncan, Alexander, VII., 533.

Coventry, Henry,

II.,

564.

Dunmore, John Murray, 4th

of,

VIII., 808.

earl of, VIII., 209.

Coxe, Daniel, V., 204.

Dupplin, Thomas Hay, lord viscount, VI., 762.

Crawford, William, VIII., 464.

Durantaye, Oliver Morel de

Cremilles, Louis Hyacinthe Bayerode, X., 768.

Durell, admiral Philip, X., 994.

la, IX.,

203.

Cresap, Michael, VIII., 459.

Dyson, Jeremiah, VII., 763.

Creville, George, VIII., 321.

Eaton, Theophilus,

Crisasy (Crisafy), Chevalier de, IX., 642.

Egremont, Charles

Croghan, George, VII., 982. Crosby, Aaron, VIII., 551.

Elliot,

Andrew,

Elliot,

John, X., 728.

Croy Sobre, Emmanuel, prince de, X., 527,

Erskine,

Crozat, Antoine, V., 508.

Essex, Robert Devereux, 3d earl

Cruger, Henry, VII., 843.

Estaing, Charles Hector d',

Cruikskanks, John, VIII., 206.

Estrades, Godefroy, count d',

Cunninghain, Henry, VI., 51.

Estrees, Louis Caesar Letellier, marshal d', X., 962.

sir

428.

I.,

Wyndham, 2d

William, VIII., 713.

X

Cutler, Timothy, D. D., VI., 908.

Evans, John, IV., 1082.

Dablon, reverend Claude, IX., 97.

Evertsen, Cornelis,

Dagworthy,

Eyre, William, X., 545, 729.

Daillie,

Eli, X., 730.

reverend Peter,

III.,

Fagel, Gaspard,

651.

earl of, VII., 541.

VIII., 96.

of, I.,

II.,

349.

529.

Dalling, sir John, VIII., 794.

Falconer, Thomas, X., 729.

Dalyell, James, VII., 547.

Fanning,

VIII., 284.

Dayton, Elias, VIII., 682.

Faradon, Louis Normant du, IX., 1080.

Deat, reverend Antoine, IX., 1021.

Farewell, George,

De De De De De De De

Farmar, David, VII., 816.

Graetf, Cornelis, II., 56. la

Cour, Andrew, VII., 127.

127.

1167.

572.

II.,

II.,

Edmund,

,

663.

III.,

Fauquier, Francis, VII., 511.

Lancey, captain James, VII., 402.

Fendall, Josias,

Lancey, colonel James, VIII., 718.

Fenelon, reverend Francois de Salignac, IX., 112.

Lancey, Oliver, VIII., 788.

Finch,

Lancey, Peter, VI., 469.

Fisher, John, VIII., 739.

Lancey, Stephen, VIII., 480.

Fitch,

Delawar, John West, 7th lord, VI., 163.

Delawar, Thomas West, 3d lord,

II.,

sir

II., 67.

Heneage,

Thomas,

II.,

534.

VII., 820.

Fitzherbert, William, VII., 763.

Fleury, cardinal de, IX., 959.

93.

Denny, William, X., 696. Depeyster, Abraham, IV., 777.

Forbes, John, VII., 344.

De

Forster, William, V., 978.

Peyster,

Abraham,

Forbes, William, X., 730.

junior, VIII., 14.

DePeyster, Frederick, VIII., 755.

Foncault, M., X., 1161.

De

Foy, Edward, VIII., 323. Franklin, William, VII., 837.

Peyster, John, VI., 132.

Derby, James Stanley, 7th earl of, I., 134. De Ruyter, Michael Adriaensz duke de, I., 582. mbault, reverend Louis Honore" Fleury, IX., 676.

Fremin, reverend Jacques, IX., 130. French, Philip, IV., 396.

Desenclaves, reverend Jean Baptiste, X., 107.

Cage, Thomas, VIII., 247.

Desmarets, Jean Baptiste Francois, X., 372.

Galissoniere, Roland Michel Barrin, marquis de 532.

Desmaretz, Yves Marie, X., 577. 1),-

Galloway, Joseph, VII., 291.

Witt, John, I, 559.

Garlies,

Dieskau, baron, X., 340. Dollier de Casson,

Dorset,

Edward

r.\

erend Francois, IX., 138.

Sackville,

-lili

earl of,

I.,

133.

Dosquet, right reverend Pierre Hermant, IX., 1032.

i

John Stewart,

rarnier, re\

lord, VIII., 322.

erend Julien, IX., 171.

Gasooyne, Bamber, VII., 643. Geelvinck, Cornelis,

11.,

564.

Dover, Joseph Yorke, baron, VIII., 405.

Germain, reverend Charles, X., 548.

Downing, sir George, II., 415. Downing, William, X., 773. In inm, 730;

Gerrish, Sarah, IX., 489.

Du

Gladwin, Ilonry, VII., 961

.

Gisors, count de, X., 696. (.,ii

,,i,

bishop, VII., 363

,

Ohall'ault de Bosno, count, X., 767.

la,

VI.

GENERAL INDEX

Bio]

W

>nl

the

of

526 58

is;)

New Netherland,

member

558, 561, 570

to, ibid.

Bird, lieutenant-colonel, John, biographical notice

Birds of

361.

I.,

503

v

rvii,

trates against

certain orders received from governor Hunter, 2 3 i

to

II

ft

Bladen, Martin,

Hun-

aoi

and,

Blooon John

1008

.

a,

Ni

567

I.,

17ii.

Maurice, surveyor of the «uston»8, governor

trohfleld, ter

of the board of trade,

W

by the

ad

u

ih

Ionneau captain, X., 40, 71.

\in lord iro

hi

lardo,

Ufl

Blancmesnil.

I.,

11.,

(See

593,

II.,

at

249,

631, 634.

La

jfetgnon.)

Ticonderoga, X., 751.

III.,

74

;

GENERAL INDEX.

82

712; a magistrate at Albany,

Blank, Aert, IV., 942.

of Indian affairs, 805

Blank, Nicholas, IV., 809. Blankerts, Leysbert,

Blankets, duty on,

made

III.,

I.,

[B,

Bleecker (Bleycker), Jan Janse, an Indian interpreter,

Blandenburgh, Benjamin, IT., 935, 1007.

90

178.

634; the Indians

demand

that they he

623

David Jami-

for, II.,

son said to have been found guilty

;

IV., 400, 429,

of,

;

Onondaga, marries a French woman, IX., 685. Blathwayt, William, member of the board of trade, III., xv,

an alderman of Albany, IV.,

;

recorder of Albany, 407, 408, 491. 492, 539, 567,

mayor of

572, 575, 579, 597, 693, 695, 727;

Albany, 896, 899, 902, 904, 907, 911. Bleecker (Blaquerd), Jan (John), a prisoner in Canada, 513

442, 823. Blassia, an

Il.y

747; commissioner

representative of Albany in the assembly, 330,

;

331 569,

of beaver wool, IV., 572.

Blasphemy, military punishment

III.,

;

alderman of Albany, 771, 773, 840

;

III.,

the Indians

friendly to, 775.

Bleecker (Bleaker), Johannes, interpreter, IV., 341, 541,

V

,

IV.; 146, 232, 246, 258, 262, 298, 300, 418, 436, 456,

217; sent a delegate to Onondaga, IV., 498, 560, V.,

466, 471. 475, 478, 486, 599, 626, 635, 641, 643, 667,

242, 245, 372, 376

709, 770, 773, 819, 820, 833, 845, 852, 857, 865, 885,

IV, 562, 563; answer

926, 949, 963, 964, 1026, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1037, 1039,

the Indians

1042, 1080, 1081, 1118, 1124, 1140, 1141, 1157, 1173, 1175, 1176, 1179, V., 2

governor Andros Baltimore

letter of lord

271, 272, 277;

III.,

letters of

;

governor Dongan communicates the

New York

363

to,

339;

to,

state of affairs in

auditor-general of the plantations,

;

404, 421, 424, 497, 498, 502, 692, 718, 719, IV

n86, V., 197; clerk of the council, 171, V., 71, 193;

transmitted

to,

26,

,

428, 605, IV.,

III.,

an account of the revenue to be

III..

429, 502

and Van Cortland

lips

to,

to,

letter of Messrs. Phil-

;

Van

608; Mr.

Cortland

;

make

his report of his negotiations there, of the live nations

propositions to, 568

;

564;

to,

recorder of

Albany. 896, 899, 904, 911; assistant aldeiman of journal of his visit to Onondaga, 889,

Albany, 755 917

;

at

;

Oneida, 894, V., 267; mayor of Albany, IV.,

984, 983 (bis), 985, 990, 995, 998, 999

;

commissioner

for Indian affairs, V., 635, 638, 657, 661, 662, 664,

667, 675, 079, 693, 694, 696. Bleecker, John J., merchant of Albany, VII., 614.

Bleecker, John R., merchant of Albany, VII., 489, 614. Bleecker, Nicolas, journal of his negotiations at Onondaga, IV., 558;

commissioner of Indian

affairs,

V., 910,

desires the friendship of, 610, 650; governor Slough-

VI., 59, 107, 108, 132, 232, 233, 235, 241, 251; ac-

Smith and William Nicolls

cused of spreading evil reports among the five nations,

ter writes to, 768; colonel

revise a letter of governor Sloughter to, 791

New York

sent to, 792

chief and council of

;

New York

ernor Fletcher

to, 846,

165, 204, 243;

who

255

letter of

laws of

;

the commander-in-

836

to, 813,

;

of gov-

848, IV., 13, 31, 37, 54, 157,

sends despatches

to, 57, 72, 226,

communicates orders from the lords of trade

;

to

the attorney and solicitor-generals respecting the colonies,

104

;

furnishes estimates of the military resources

of Connecticut

Graham 767

;

death

and Rhode Island, 105

374

to,

;

;

letter of

extract of a letter received from,

captain Nanfan's accounts referred of, V.,

James 1130

to,

507; Horace Walpole succeeds him as

auditor of the plantation accounts, ibid, 547 tion of the board of trade

;

resolu-

on the bishop of London's

Blauvelt (Blaeuw, Blaeuwvelt), captain of the sloop LaGarse, 397, 399

;

versation with director Kieft,

stepson

of, ibid

;

;

194, 195

;

the Indians

Blein, F., IX., 418.

Blenac.

(See Contre.)

Blendricxsen, Mr.,

of the Senecas, V., 387,

arrives at Oneida, 661.

Bleury (Blurry), ensign de, conducts Mr. Stoddart

Crown

566; sent to Carillon, 836, 850; reports the state of Frontenac, 854. (See Sabrevois.) captain,

Blidenbourgh

III.,

II.,

433, 435.

180.

(Blydenburgh),

Block, Aedriaen,

I.,

Benjamin, deposes against

11.

Block, Hans, gunner at

New

Amstel,

II.,

171, 182,

English fleet, II., 267. Blockhouse, a, sent from New York to Pemaquid,

III., 71.

III.j

248

J

Block island (Black island, Blocx island), the English take possession

of,

vessels

662

and submits

to

a party of Indians,

fort

Blew Stocking,

Bleecker, Henry, junior, VII., 614. Bleecker, Jacob, a merchant at Albany, VII., 615, VIII., 610. Bleecker, Jacobus, an Indian interpreter, sent to Onondaga, returns

commands

Point, X., 210, 215;

Bleecker, Henry, VII., 614.

;

for the victory at, IV.,

1157.

description of a, VII., 101, 185.

Bleecker, Anthony, VII., 614. Bleecker, Hendrick.'VII., 614.

VI., 233

31.

I.,

Blenheim, public thanks ordered

Block, captain Simon, killed in an engagement with the

one of the Twelve men, 415.

Blawbeck (Blew bek), chief sachem 660

I.,

910, VI., 59, 132, 232

affairs,

governor Fletcher, IV., 129, 145, 180.

captures sundry prizes, 398, 507.

Blauw, Gerrit Dhcksen, makes a declaration respecting a conkill a

missioner for Indian 233, 238, 241.

Blickhuysen, Michiel,

letter to, VII., 363.

I.,

294.

Bleecker, Rutger, recorder of Albany, V., 791, 794; com-

his report, 239

;

nounces the arrival of several hundred Iroquois Albany, 289.

anat

off,

I., ;

565,

II.,

IV., 512; mentioned, 697

York

to sail

;

several

;

cruisers fitted out at

off,

New

between the capes of Delaware and,

1148; included 599

and capture some

134;

not in the duke of York's patent,

170; the French despoil, 752; a pirate sunk

III.,

in

the patent to

West India

traders

Rhode

off,

Island, V.,

VII., 226.

; ;,

1

— Noi]

;

GENERAL INDEX.

Blom reverend Qarmano Blommaerl

Blommert),

(Bloemert,

,\ni

Netherlands,

horses, 4SS

trader

tdrlaen,

to

Nethorland, n

i

K

i

i

in-

and others,

.

and reply

presented, 256; order on the petition of,

of,

257; resolutions of the states general

guardians of Johan

Van

the

in

Rensselaer against, 320; judg-

Van Rensselaer and, 330

in the ease of

the oourt of Holland in the case of

Van

partner in the oolonie of Rens-

n

704

910; stationed

at

Kaderachque,

591

II.,

103; magis-

appointed chief

;

officer

towns on Long island, 701; deputy

certain

to

in

New

Bloody Bloom, Edward, brings despatches

to

governor Burnet,

de, dead,

member

Blount, Henry,

Blue mountains (Blow

X

434.

,

of the

Bogardus, Willem,

Blue point, where,

III.,

176.

III.,

255.

lieutenant-colonel

Harry,

sir

king

Edward Sackville

queen

of,

mond Andros

notice of,

Bohemia

in,

,

527; marshal d'Estr^es

for

the restoration ;

M

,

his

Mothe. (See

la

Indians captured

115;

at,

157;

at Detroit to, 163.

I.,

II.,

515.

of,

306, 339

report on the state of Indian

somption, Mississippi, 85

191.

358, 381

de.)

V., 801.

in Acadia, 2S3 ;

affairs,

83

commands

;

at

to maintain his

80; his

at fort

L'As

the river St

defeats a party of English

;

burns his

;

fort

on the river

ground

to the last

St. St.

John John

extremity

409; collects a number of Acadians and harasses the English, 416, 466, 518; burns an English vessel, 427 assists

Acadian families

528;

to

escape from the English,

winters at Miramichi, ;

expected

at

547;

ordered to

Louisbourg, 573

;

on

way to that place, 692, 698; the Indians abandon, 852; retires to Miramichi, 854 return- toQn his

;

ordered to remove the Acadians

437. II.,

and

;

commandant

;

Ann, 1101; his report

fort Clinton, X.,

ordered to remain on the river

;

Louisbourg. 552, 838 759.

525.

Boelisen, Andries,

New

518,

J. J., II.,

de, IX., 908

on the expedition against

359,

114.

Bodel, Nyenhuis,

Mothc.)

267, 282,

the boundaries of

New York,

Champigny, M.

Bock, Alien Pietersz,

I.,

;

II.,

France, IX., 913.

(See

La

Deschamps

Boishebert, Charles

admiral de Ruyter did not

memoir on

Bobin, Isaac, deputy secretary of

I.,

IX., 886; reve-

retires to Detroit from, X.,

removing the settlement

299, 358, 381

Boddens, Isaac,

650.

III.,

Boisbriant, Dugue* de, governor of Louisiana, IX., 1025.

John, 264

,

Edward, X., 316. from Detroit,

distance

il-

the English, 342, 343, 347, 350, 352, 353, 356, 419.

Bochart, Jean.

1-

400;

X.

in,

H

741

of,

informs baron de Dieskau that the English

at Detroit, 1036; sent to fort

captured, 315, 326

Bob6, reverend

Boelens, A.,

queen

islands, IV., 278.

attempt to retake, 329, 383; proposed to be ceded to

Boeckhoven,

mentioned, 71",

of,

IX., 600.

VIII., 782.

taken by the English,

of,

proposition

II

George Downing offends the

;

in the service of the

962.

in,

Boisblam- island,

Bois de

New York,

(See Trade.)

Boavista, island

,

275

the

ometimes

Canada more severe than

in

service

II.,

in assist

elei

416; the queen

of,

committee of New-

Bent with for

133; the prince

of, I.,

project of

biographical

744.

III.,

of trade.

Bocx, Mr

'.'in.

Boisbriant, ensign, sent on an expedition towards Albany,

of refugees established in

when

Bohemia,

inhabited by Hurons, 13S

Boake, Joseph de, IV., 241, 242.

;

74.

III.,

of the general

rend father Potier

VIII., 684.

Bo, Jan Peterse,

Ulster and

militia of

the

601.

,

are building fort

where, VI., 121, VIII., 34;

bills),

Blundel, Christopher, VIII., 456, 642.

326

459,

II.,

member

York, VIII

Boileau,

board of trade,

the bounds of the Iroquois country, VII., 573.

Board Board

"f

IV., 90.

II., , ,

of

New fork,

914

titles of,

Archbishop Potter

VIII of

,

078.

,'iTl

to

111., ">4

;

reverend

;

the I

New

Calamy,

New York,

3G2;

VII.,

a, printed in Bos-

the Ei

Boscal,

tin', to

I'm-

ommandanl

i

III

\

III., 74.

Real, announi

of M.

; .

Jonquiere, X., 111.

la

Boscawen

418.

741.

,

midshipman de

de

ft.,

.

Bo ton

ii

130

[..lis, I.,

admiral

(Boscaven),

Freni h, VI., 990

before the king,

Edward,

capturi

;

a

some

-t

the

m

Fri n< b

X., 298, 379; reported niisunder&tending between the

be allowed in

commander

to be read, 58;

the, 59

;

372, 688, 821, IV., 2>7, V.,

of the land

mrg and,

ford

756, 767; sends intelligence of the

ordered

to

Louisbourg

of

fall

England, 833.

Boscawen (Boscowen), Mr., member of the board of

in

trade,

710; of the privy council, IV., 103.

III.,

Boscawen (New Hampshire), feat d at, X.,

a

Canada Indians de-

party of

33; Can;. da Indians make a

di

45.

Boomtjes hook (Bombay hook, Bomtges hooke, Boomtiens hook), the Indians sell the Dutch all the land from fort Christina to,

I.,

590, II

,

18

;

the country between

New Amstel

at,

111.,

249.

Boschatel, adjutant, killed, x., 1089.

Boschieter, Claes Pietersen,

Boshuil, Mr.

the Dutch

;

England,

Boss,

meaning

II.,

of his majesty's

Boston (Massachusetts), captain Forester reported returned

at,

Boots made of Indians' skins, VIII., 785.

tion

365

Onondaga with

letters for

the mission-

II.,

349, 733, 734, VI., 504

;

reverend

father Lalitau, a native of, IX., 882; vessels arrive at

Quebec from, X., 41, 44, 65, 768, 841, 843 despatches sent to Canada by a vessel from, 270; several ships missing which sailed from, 718 news of the approach ;

;

of the English to Quebec, brought by ships from,

effects of confiscation,

the people at, 4'.i7

;

of,

the

sails

for

313

have

;

university

arms and ammuni-

442; William Coddington a English

possessions of the Dutch, officiates at,

to

L, 286; information received from, reill

director Stuyvesant sells

;

to

merchant

353.

ary there, IX., 192.

Bordeaux (Bourdeaux),

to,

garding the

Booth, John, ensign of the militia of Southhold, IV., 808.

II.,

commander

Swift, IV., 301.

749.

sent to

294.

of the word, IV., 82.

Bostock, captain, R. N.,

32.

,

12:;.

Boss, Jacob, naturalized, VI., 29. III., 31.

Boone, Thomas, governor of South Carolina, VII., 571, VIII.,

Bootsma, Mr.,

116, 119, 120, 122,

II.,

(See Botwell.)

Boshuysen, captain John, lands the Russian ambassador in

342.

1S6.

II.,

630, 637.

by the peo-

Boone, Daniel, VIII., 113.

Boot, Adriaen,

II.,

Anastel, 51;

Boon, Francis, II., 475, III., 74. Boone, Christopher, one of the council of trade,

III.,

III.,

Bosch, Bendrick,

New

ple on the Kristina kill as far as, 605

anchor

Bosch (Both), Albert,

to be resorted to

cape Hinlopen and, to be annexed to the court at

Boquet,

ith

l\

BOS, Ibn. hick,

815.

Boone, Mr.,

the

to

i

;

lanada expedition,




1

GENERAL INDEX

Bob] Boston

!

U

continuid,

on t n. u

i .

I,

and

tar sen!

chants

who

Jfoi k

laroltyt to, 668

fr

England

from, 697

Beloher

bed

ii

26

at,

Mi

.

I

664, 77-,

at,

665; large quantltli

at,

Bhoi

to,

Dumber

;

latitude 12

of,

of mer-

Bhip Fidelia seized

;

722

of,

than from

tei

Bellomonl

York, 685; earl of

Ne\i

to

Dton oolleotor

I'm.

-

1

h..n from, 171

traded In L700 to Carolina from, 669; the

i>ni

1

Mr.

.

BenboM

rear admiral

evangel

at, f.ir

be buill

fori to

721

at,

New

to

-

the earl of Bellon

;

f"

oaptain

;

proceeds

t

"in the

Ave

-

n nil thi

gentlemen

I

I

,

iO

Jol n

31

.

Ii

to :

Pisoattaway from,

757;

72.'!

expenses

oi

Bellomonl

arl of

ii

ol

ber of vessels belonging

at,

to, in

at,

788

482 483

lieutenant govei noi

,

wai

;

Wen. Oil,

Mr.

:

a

num1700,790; owns more

manufactured

Ball

;

;

bis journey to

In

from, 776; the deputy collector

Island

merchant, 779, 792

t-i

at,

by the lords of trade from, 771

letter received

Rhode

value of a piece

;

j

oolonel of the

ernoi Bhirlej sends

reverend Timothy Cutler,

Scotland and Ireland, ibid

all

imports from England

its

New

trade of

1700, 7!M

in

York, ibid; oarrieson

value of

;

bas twice the

;

with

illegal trade

Newfoundland,

Spain and Portugal, ibid, and with

way to

a

to, 9

Shirty

n If]

brisl burcb in, and Mercer on their

re< toi

ol

Ellison

i

vessels than

fbi

'

al



to

t

Braddock, 942

confer with general

-•

out from,

I

a regiment at

;

lake Q ge from, 1003; news of the battle of lake George sent to, 1004 governor Pownal returns to, ;

Canada and other to the earl of

places, 792;

petition

a

793

at,

;

captain Kidd broughl

810; the coast surveyed from

convenience

greater

possesses

than

New

court

at,

York, 862; hovi

885

presented

Bellomonl from the minister, &o., of

the ohuroh of England to,

is

830;

to,

930; one of the olergy

in

Apthorp

a

Atwood about

to

visit, at,

of England, ibid; letters

clergy

427

Nevi

;

the proclamation for regulating

the currency disregarded

land greater than that of foreign coin,

ibid

the neutrality of the

Of

Canada

to

touch

100; arrives

at,

New York,

1180; clips

at,

73

10S,

at,

V*.,

31

;

complaints against

nations sent from, 42; the

live

from, 6]

fleet sails

trade to Eng-

its

colonel Quary's report on the

;

trade and government of,

mast

1132;

in,

the

;

fleet

reduction

for the

colonel Nicholson expected

;

2."i2

;

an express ordered

to

run between Albany and, 260; the ships of war on the

New York

300

;

station to be victualed

and cleaned

order for a cessation of hostilities sent

the Hazard sloop of war lost near, 390 a

man

of

Talbot arrives 575

347

to,

;

a chaplain of

war minister of, 466; colonel Nicholson New York from, 469 reverend John

sends clothing to

into,

;

in,

;

at,

;

473

;

the palatine delegates put

annual charge of

fort

William, 598

;

num-

Cutler

New York

;

spirit of the

people

of,

begins to spread

other provinces, 937, 940 of the king opposed

at,

;

724

;

among

of,

George

a congratulatory address

4.">1 ;

III.

Cutler, M.

recommended

reverend doctor

;

from the episcopal clergy

head of the

of,

dead, ibid; Benjamin

ol,

I).,

profession

legal

506

in,

566

the Indian trade east

;

;

of, in

;

ciples throughout the colonies, 980

associations

formed

in, VIII.,

68

non-importation

:

invites the coope-

;

ration of the other colonies, 80; tumults in,

Virginia resolutions favorably entertained

merchant

of,

burnt

in

effigy

goods from Great Britain, 214

;

for

330; tea destroyed

413

ing,

the port

;

the

;

176; a

having imported

Isaac Sears

22H; the bead-quarters of general Gage, 247 Oliver one of the representatives

1»7

at,

of,

329

;

moves to, Andrew ;

he dies

at,

influence of that proceed-

at,

408

of,

shut by act of parliament, 433

Washington

at,

459

;

;

;

an order received in New-

for articles for the army at, 493; the Indians alarmed at hearing that a large body of troops are at, 520 an armament sent to, 539 admiral Craves at, ."44

the

collision

the reasonable authority

by the people

fire in,

the

some Scaticook Indians

the eastern Indians refuse to

;

reverend Mr.

whose hands, 669; the board of trade lay before the king a book stamp act riots in, printed at, 07S (see Otis, James) 759,761; takes the lead in spreading seditions prinin,

York

723

-'174;

society for the propagation of the gospel established

tween New York and, 080 at,

to

Pratt at the

general

imprisoned

357;

of,

character ol the episcopal

;

assembly, 429

paralyzed,

of,

496; John

ber of ships cleared 1714-1717 from, 618; trade be-

receive proposals from the five nations

favor -of Mr. Apthorp, native of, 375

the case of the sufferers by

;

presented

;

the

49;

VII.,

arrived with a

Is

Qridley a native

1

397; reverend Mr. McClenni at, 409, and conforms to the church of England at, 415; constant communication between Halifax and,

bury contemplates extending the post to North Caroday on which the post sets out from lina from, 1120 1131

110; colon

in,

son

king's

of,

to the

for,

the

piscopal clergy of, write to the reverend doctor

tl

sent by post to Philadelphia from, 1113; lord Corn-

York

at,

Johnson

maintains that the people

of,

bound by the laws

army

an admiralty

;

924; the rom-t of admiralty treated with contempt are not

great

Hawley

Gideon

Indians told that

careening vessels

fortified, >^77

chief justice

;

Georges

St.

for

reverend

1009;

VI., 13; a

;

;

near, 571 for,

;

between the king's troops and the people ;

no vessel allowed

to clear

from New York

572; lieutenant-colonel McLean embarks

for,

583

;

GENERAL INDEX.

88 Boston (Massachusetts) — continued.

New York committee

the

584

of,

protest against the blockade

general Washington, major-general Lee and

;

adjutant-general Gates proceed to, 589

reinforce-

;

regiments gone

645

to,

evacuated by the British, 675 Halifax from,

for

sail

676

Indians for evacuating, 689

a great plunderer

706

at,

717

Indians in

;

Howe

lands

792

at,

tin-

ment

94

;

judges paid out

;

marquis de

;

5,

,

70

the govern-

;

carried on overland between

Thomas Temple tentiary at, 87

;

75

at,

;

71

trade

;

ibid

sir

;

;

in 1681 of, 166 Huguenots Champlain traded on the site of,

;

;

378; Acadia restored by a treaty made at, 379; sir Edmund Andros governor of, 3S0 Acadia does not suspected of an intention to increase as fast as, 401 ;

;

seize Port Royal,

to

make war

446

;

Nova

429

Scotia,

urges the Indians

;

against the French, 438

not palisaded,

;

the king of France called on to punish the old

parliamentarians

461

at,

107

notice of the siege of Louis-

;

bourg sent to admiral Knowles from, 112 commodore Knowles at, 144 no more French prisoners at, 153; ;

;

ley writes

duke

the

to

of,

from, 190

New York,

d'Estaing issues a proclamation

from the harbor

governor Shir-

;

of Bedford

distance from Albany and

679

1167.

an expedition organized

;

in

bany,

III.,

mund

ship, IV., 1056.

Boswell, William, succeeds states general,

50, 95

I.,

Dudley Carleton near the complains of reverend Hugh

sir ;

Peters, 567.

Botetourt [Norborne Berkeley, 3d,] baron, governor of Virginia, VIII., 209

Botta, captain,

biographical notice

;

of,

260.

wounded, X. 431.

Botta, marquis, appointed imperial commissioner in Italy,

X., 260. Bottle bay (lake Champlain), X., 843.

ture vessels belonging to, 493, 568, X., 61; Indians

Boucheine, Mathew,

lay waste the country around, IX., 495

Boucher, Pierre, IX., 194; his descendants, X., 149.

for

;

;

;

d'Eau

;

500

505

;

;

;

cription

detained

of,

in 1691, 507

at,

intelligence

549

530

;

;

the garrison of Port Royal

the Abenaquis at war with, 537

from Quebec sent

544

to,

negroes

;

plan for an expedition against, 659, 727

;

prisoners ill-treated

New

chevalier

;

sir William Phipps' ships return at, 499, 501 the French government urged to attack, Canada can very well dispense with, 506 des-

to,

691

at,

a

;

England, 725; description

capture preferable to that of

most easterly part of

Quebec

to,

733

;

U

principal of,

New

New England,

York, 728

;

;

tor

in,

in its

the

an expe-

a fleet arrives at, 849, 859

;

Canada

to

Bouchard, M., X., 41.

Boucherville, captaiu, to

at,

from,

X,

930; Abenakis

visit,

966;

their doings

privateers about to sail for cape

1; distance

[Francois Pierre]

de,

at

Crown

whence descended, 149; captain,

Boucherville, ensign [Rene Autoine], de,

Breton

from Louisbourg, 4; French

wounded at

at-

Sillery,

X., 1086.

Boucherville,

Borgne

le

de.

(See Le Borgnc.)

Boucherville, an Iroquois burnt

man

at,

622

518

at, IX.,

;

Indians kill a

a party of Iroquois defeated near, 629.

;

Bonder (Bondor), M.

de, IX., 696, 780, sio.

Boudinot (Bodinot, Boudenott, Boudienot, Boudinole, Boudinott),

Elias,

affronts

lieutenant-governor

743; a merchant at

1135;

pro-

clamation preparatory to the expedition againstCanada

there, 967;

X., 46; sent

to Quebec, 125.

tends an Indian conference, 445.

expedition sent against Port Royal from, 928

printed

lieutenant

Boucherville,

v.

commands L'Emerillon,

Newfoundland, 117; returns

111.,

a

606.

Boucherat [Louis], chancellor of France, X.,

from, 857; vessels resort to Acadia from, 917; an ;

I.,

Point, X., 36;

729; route from

de Rouvilie and Dupuis return

Messrs

;

town

Boubert, ensign de, imprisoned in Quebec, X., 718.

;

French

in 1701, 726;

de Iberville's plan

dition against, lost, 735

its

Canadians

the

to

;

count

;

an attack between Orange and, 464 vesthe garsels seen bound to Port Royal from, 474 French caprison of Port Royal carried to, 475

Canada

news

;

d' Anville's fleet to

238; mentioned, 268, 272; secure sir EdAndros and disband his army, 608. Bostwicke, captain, R. N., fitter for bedlam than a queen's

119, 793

at,

men

solid

;

309, 312

at,

from,

sails

reported,- 106

at,

duke

count

buccaneers assisted

;

at,

famine

of the return of part of the

France, received

;

Bostoners (Bastoniens), allowed to trade at Esopus and Al-

;

York, 165

commodore Warren

;

43

an English

required to send reinforcements

;

;

100

prices at,

;

62

at,

Scotia, 63

;

at,

expected

fleet

73

Cape

to

preparations for war making

;

M. de Grandfontaine plenipo-

de Frontenac w rites to the governor of, 120 description does not acknowledge the duke of of, in 1679, 137 arrive

expected

Nova

in the direc-

two regiments to be sent

;

the French take prisoners near, 164

has but few regular

;

beaver trade, 65

more republican than monarchical, Canada and,

of,

Fayette

la

trade proposed to be established be-

attracts the

;

fleet

to

arrives at, 751

Canada Indians make incursions

;

;

the

to

sir

;

tween Quebec and, IX troops, 53

reasons given

New York

;

and army

their fleet

;

;

commodore Warren at, 46 a French at, 48 number of ships of war at, 55,

major-general Robertson

;

16

;

;

;

Henry Clinton arrives in, American camp near, 741 major

of the revenue at, 708

general

;

four British

;

to be employed off, 10 numaccompanied admiral Walker's French spies at, 15 defenses

that

tion of, 32, 33

H. Clinton quits, 674

sir

;

604

in,

men

Breton from, 42

;

obtain provisions

difficult to

recommended

ber of

of,

;

it

cruisers

expedition, from, 12

ments march to the camp at, 597 the British army no influence beyond, 599 general Gage finds

•exercise

[Bos-

Bigns

an address land in

a petition to to

New

lord Cornbury,

Newton (Long

Leisler,

York, 749, IV.,

king William, 1006,

Island), in

93.");

1008

payment

;

(124,

and

obtains

of part of

the expenses attending lady Cornbury's funeral, V., 111, 407.

.

;

GENERAL INDEX. Bondrot, Abr iham, at

fori

maquld,

Pi

land

[X \

do,

Oswego

tin

al

89

t

U)

'



T

t . . J

I

1 1 -

X I

Inform •

1

ap]

i

merfloi)

o

old,

of the iii

1

Will

of fori

fall



a

663;

B

loni

required t"

'.

121 , 323

II. ,

1,

with the En

ttrel

Montcalm, 603 his report of fori William Henry, 605

aid-de

m

143;

li i;i


ni

Wen fork,

oalled for of the

560, 587

opin-

;

Ions of the lords of trade on New

773;

s.-v,

and New

taken

steps *i

TV':

oi k,

fork and New Jei running the Connection!

for

D lanoey's

lieuteni

,

New

ew ITork and

obsei

lie

lords of trad

pletethatbetwi

New York and Now Jersey, s 16, 9 qoi Hardy on the subjeol of the New fork and New Jersey, 960; between New York and Bey,

and

i >•



t

w

en N

i

-

and

ifork

:i

1

a irtain,

7;'

tampshire and Masss

attention of the

New

1-1

New

.

t

;

i

-

approved

b-

fork an

th

iflrmed, 87, 88, 103

i

80,

fork

156

bonl

;

i

he orthern, 107;

be

to

and Massachusetts, tlement

difficulties

fork

an.

-

I

experienced

of the,

I

L35

the set-

in

papers transmitted to the board of

of, 207-;

whites

id

I

New Jersettlement postponed, 204; between New fork n

between the

;

between New

;

I,

..

sey, its

and the

i

refuses to provide for the ej

oommission

;

i



settling, 711., 38,

fork assembly

I

i

n

in

board of trad. the In

Ji

Indian. 136;

D

'

New fork and

map

;

of the

the ~ix nations,

trade respecting, 208; the board of trade censure the

150; report of the board of trade thereon, 158; with

manner

the Indian-; approved,

tin dispute 1

mendation of

tli''

is

carried on about, 22]

board of trade on, 223

recom-

;

tints in

;

con-

sequence of disputed, 273; governor Pownall and lieutenant-governor Do Lancey differ on the subject

333; Opinion of the board of dad.- on the

Of,

New

Yot-k and Massachusetts, submitted to the king, 335;

the board of trade decline allowing any alteration in tho proposition for settling chusetts, 336

tin'

New York and

Mr. Charles animadverts on

;

of the board of trade on the

New

York,

tin'

report

New

Jersey

and Massachusetts, 337; demands copy of president Schuyler on, 338 .an

of

lie

of,

address

502; Cadwallader

,

.'ititt

;

the council

dians, 578, 725, 726, 727;

remarks on

('olden'.-,

address, 563; proposed between

th.'

state of

that

whites and Inthe controversy

New Hampshire

New fork and

595; between

letter of

board of trade en the sub-

tie'

between New York and

a

with the Indians, peace

preserved only by settling th

New York

ject

;

Massa-

board of trade, 603 advantages of a line with the Indians, 004; between the English and French in America, 605; between New York and New Hamp;

shire, the Connecticut river declared,

042,930; be-

tween New York and New" Jersey about being

settled,

042; between the whites and Indians, description

o\,

658, 661, 728, 1005; an act passed to determine the

Massachusetts and

New

York, 070

;

between whites

and Indians, sir William Johnson urges the settlement of, -S3S, VIII., 87; between the provinces of New York and Quebec fixed. VII., 850, 873, 874, 875, 1003, VIII., 3

;

between Massachusetts and New York,

the earl of Shelburne

recommends

tiro

settlement

of,

William Johnson's

;

between

;

New York and

New

Jersey, further measures for the settlement of,

349

between

;

on, 371

:

New York and

about

to

Massachusetts agreed

be Burvej ed, 307

utterly disregarded

;

with Che Indians,

by the whites, 470; with the In548; of the

dians, includes several Seneca villages

French possessions Canada, 781 to,

;

in

North America,

377; of

IK.,

of Acadia, conflicting opinions in regard

^78,879: of NewFrance, memoir on, 894; ofAcadia,

895

;

of Canada,

memoir

of M. Bobe* on, 913; of the

between New York and Canada, papers relating to,960; between th" English and country of the Abenakis, 943

;

French colonies, proposed, X.,227; of Canada, necessity of fixing, 251

tween New Y'ork and Massachusetts unsettled, ibid; between the whites and Indians, submitted to the

sir

Hampshire determined, 331

respecting,

Connecticut, 596; be-

166;

New York and Massachusetts, judge Livingston commissioner for running, 192 between Massachusetts and New further explanation thereof, 17n. between

293;

the French

posed

;

of

New

England, French

\

iewa of,

of Canada, M. de Montcalm's views on, 691;

must not he

particular about, 820; pro-

Canada, 935; memoir on, 1134.

for

Boundbrook, the American army Bounis, YVillem,

II.,

at,

VIII., 730.

404.

Bounkley, William, one of the council for trade, III., 31. a, for the exportation of naval stores from the plan-

Bounty,

tations, reason of the failure of the

196 (see Acts, British)

;

act offering,

to those enlisting in

V.,

America,

VII., 75,499.

Bouquet (Boquet), Henry, biographical notice

of,

VII., 352;

arrives at fort Pitt; 545, 550,656; defeats the Indians at

Bushy

run, 540; news of his success

to the six nations, 553; the

bation of the conduct

of,

communicated

king expresses his appro-

570

;

commands

the troops

in the

southern district of the colonies, 61S

ing to

march against the western Indians, 649

;

prepar;

aware

; ;

GENERAL INDEX.

92 Eouquet, Henry — continued.

deavors to save the English from being plundered, 616, 656; colonel Brad-

of the treachery of the Indians,

660

street cooperates with,

result of his expedition

;

against the western Indians, 686

make

to,

their escape, 694

expected of him, 703 sue for peace, 711

;

hostages delivered

has performed everything

;

obliges the Ohio Indians to

;

the Delawares agree to

;

consequence of terms offered by, 730

engagement

750

to,

;

and

a

peace in

Muskingum

;

against the

Indians,

nia, X., 924.

gan, HI., 450, IX., 240, 246.

movements

the French expelled from,

;

Bourdeaux, M.

to England, IX., 783. Bourdon, Jean, attorney-general of Canada, some particulars of, IX., 24; M. de Mezy sends him to France,

takes possession of Hudson's bay, 26S

;

explores

;

cape Breton, X., 178.

officer of

Bourdon, surgeon, accompanies M. de

la

command

Bourgeoys [Marguerite], founds the Congregation nunnery

at

commandant

of fort Detroit, IX., 806;

censured, 809. at

Sandusky, VI., 733

sent

;

to France, X., 241.

Bourke, William, captain Kidd

sells a part

of his cargo

to,

IV., 584.

Bourlamarque (Bourlamaque, Bourlamar, Bourlamarc), colonel, ordered to Canada, X., 393 with M. de Montcalm, ;

at

Montreal, 412

;

Quebec, 399 ordered

his destination, 406; at

Frontenac, 415, 416, 418,

military honors paid to, 417

;

fortifies fort

Frontenac, 440

tion against

Oswego, 441

wego, 443, 460, 478

;

to fort

420, 421, 467, 475, 477

tion, 442, 454, 531

;

;

accompanies that expedi-

commandant

;

of the forts at Os-

acts as engineer,

;

;

prepares for the expedi-

455

;

wounded,

461, 473, 476, 532, 733, 740, 809, 847, 897, 918

marquis de Montcalm unfriendly to, 491 Quebec, 547; a favorite with the troops, 551

;

the

sent to

;

;

ordered

564 command of a party sent against the English fort at lake George,

to Carillon, 553,

;

in

command

;

applies for the

at Carillon

567,568,573,721, 7s4

;

sends

(or

Ticonderoga), 565,

in

pursuit of a party

of English, 566; prisoners brought

569;

to,

com-

mended, 574, 577, 651, 694, 696, 770, 798, 813; makes preparations for the expedition against fort William Henry, 585, 599 at the siege of that fort, ;

598, 601, 602, 604, 611, 615, 642, 648, 91!)

William Henry, 605

calm's

staff,

Duquesne, 960

resumes the

;

number

of English

appointed brigadier,

;

wound, 958

command

;

;

proposed

his zeal to be

of Carillon, 970,

;

at Isle

aux Noix, 1035; endeavors to capture major Rogers, 1042 threatened by the army under Amherst, 1043 ;

;

reports his operations to the minister of war, 1054

Sillery, 1076,

1078

to be

employed

to prevent the descent

on Montreal, 1065 at the battle of wounded and his horse killed, ;

1081

employed

;

at

;

a garrison at Isle

left

;

aux Noix,

in harassing the English, 1079

;

of

embarks for France, 1124, 1126, his memoir on Canada, 1139.

Longueuil, 1105

606, 620

;

;

;

governor of

on the marquis de Mont-

his services, 608, 610, 661; en-

;

1127 Bourn, Mr., merchant of Boston, IV., 788. ;

Bourke, Thomas, taken prisoner

395; arrives

reconnoitres the ground

great assistance to chevalier de Levis, 1101; stationed

Montreal, IX., 112.

Bourgmont, M.

962

of fort

1077, 1082, 1084

IX., 207.

de,

;

rescues a

;

prepares to retire from that post, 1024

:

of the English

Burre to Quebec,

in-

his character as an

entrusted with the defense of that place, 993,

;

1002

much

advises M. deVaudreuil

8-37;

enemy, 858;

Abercrombie, 892

recommended

Labrador, 304, 783.

Bourdon, M., an

of the

nearly recovered from his

relied on,

971

fur trade diverted to, 444.

;

French ambassador

de,

790, 791, 792, 794, S07, S14, 815,

near Ticonderoga, 893

943

737,

covers

861; forwards M. de Vaudreuil's despatches

to general

for the

959. river (Hudson's bay),

of,

prisoners from the Indians, 920

Bourbon-Cond6, duke de, prime minister of France, IX.,

fort

of

;

his shoulder blade frac-

dangerously wounded, 750, 764, 766,

;

commoded by his wound, officer,

Bourbon, Henri de. (See Verneuil, duke de.) Bourbon, M., sent by governor de la Barre to governor Don-

555

74"), 7-"3

tured,

7'.::;.

749, 7>7, 7-9, 921

himself with laurels, 744;

835, 836, 842, 844, 845, S4G, 894, 895, 896;

Hannon, in western Pennsylva-

IX., 266, 268

his services then-,

;

738, 739, 743, 747, 748,

com-

VIII., 312; at Loyal

25

turns to Carillon, 717

798; movements

mands an expedition

Bourbon

633,643; recommended for promotion, 639; and for an increase of pay, 685; his necessities, 702; re-

their

fulfill

attacked by Indians, 962

;

[Bor—

Bourne, rear admiral, I., 582. Bourse, commissary, communicates intelligence to the states general of a great victory obtained over the English at the Virginias, II., 518, 519.

Bouse, James, X., 592. Bout, Adriaen de, II., 193. Bout (Boudt), Jan Evertse, one of the eight men, 191, 193, 213

;

declaration

of,

I.,

140,

as to a conversation

with director Kieft, 194; a party sent against the Indians who lay at the bouwery belonging to, 199; delegate to Holland from the people of land, 25S, 261, 270, 318, 319, 431 abstract of the remonstrance

from

;

New

Nether-

delivers in an

New

Netherland,

one of the founders of Breuckelen, 340, 341 and others enter into a contract to convey emigrants 331 to

;

New

Netherland, 379

;

owns

a bouwerie at Pavonia,

411, 412; returns to New Netherland, 420, 447, 448; particulars respecting, 432 ; one of the selectmen of

New Amsterdam,

441

;

the heirs

of,

apply for leave

to reenter into possession of certain property,

II.,

672.

Bonteveant, Stephen, IV., 1135. Bouteillier, Jean,

Boutin,

,

III.,

420.

an Acadian, X.,

Boutler, William,

memberof

10.

the board of ordnance, IV., 642.

Boutterouc, M., intendant in Canada, IX., 62; M. Talon succeeds, 787.

.

GENERAL INDEX. Bouvel,

Bouw

de, taken

.-.111111

1

oui

1

i

"•'.

l.,

I

nee of the

ii.

2

ii.ii

t

1

.

i

1

n





.

|

un

nnmboi'

n

;

r,

w.i

bi

98

v

I

land

i

[n

«i

Bowden, Thorn Bowell, Richard, lie,

urn, John,

Bowie

I

Mi-.,

,

L007.

94. 1

I

and

6 IV

.

1

and others,

assembly,

house

706

III

ed Jersej

colled

in

Combury,

lord

for

Dongan

oolonel

;

i

New

enter

-

i

a

eaker of the Ni

bj

;

ol U
r

of, VII.,

Campbell, major, superintendent of Indian Neill, notice of,

Andrew Hamilton

Canada,

New

III.,

a

;

garrison to

on the lakes, from, 27-

French-

:

New York

men

to

341

governor Dongan's actions with the Indians to-

;

be encouraged to settle in

wards, approved, 351 nations

live

395

;

to,

394

measures recommended

;

to oblige the

French priests to an expe-

the five nation

dition against Hudson's hay from, ibid; population

1080, ibid; Albany a frontier to, 410; governor

men

that

one of the to England a map of, 423 accompanied major McGregorie, hanged by ;

particulars of the expedition

Campbell, lord William, governor of Nova Scotia, VII., 946

;

the governor of, 430

288

;

from, against the Senecas, 431^136, 444-447

biographical notice

conveyed

to

174; instructions

of, VIII.,

New York,

to,

between the

6S4.

Campden, captain de, wounded, X., 431. Campe, Johannes de, IV., 942. Campe, Larrens de, IV., 942. Campeachy (Campeechy), I 223, II., 29, 30; ,

513; a ship arrives in sels sent

New York

several ships

from New York

for

IV.,

from, V., 27; ves-

logwood

to, 686.

Campen, Coert Tysen,

II.,

forces, killed,

X.,593

4; captures a Spanish ship and

carries her into New Amsterdam, 27. (See Tysen; Van Campen.) Campen, Jan. (See Van Campen.) Campen, lord Fitzmaurice distinguishes himself in the battle

Canackomie, a chief of the

five

their enemies in,

I.,

1S2;

on the north by the river told,

;

New of,

Netherland bounded

275,

II.,

80

;

the French

the inability of the French to hold, fore-

513; occupied by the French, 598,

orders issued to stop

all

IV., 352;

correspondence with,

II.,

captain Argall commits outrages on the

659,

662;

coast

of, III., 1

all

III.,

persons

found trading to Albany from, 442, 444; the Hurons belonged originally

to,

443

on

all

governors, 472

47G

;

;

movements

in,

in,

475

forts built in,

;

time consumed in atrip from Albany

Senecas and the Indians

what he heard

479

478

;

;

Jean Rosie's account

news from the Indians

angry with governor Don-

of,

gan, 486; preparations

to,

make peace between the

to

of, ibid

in, ibid,

482; the governor

makes

strange effect of the air

;

governor Dongan receives

governor Dongan endeavors

of

the governor of,

;

peace with the Senecas, 445

making

governor* Dongan instructed to

nations, V., 219.

Canada (Canida, Cannada), the Mohawks make war against

80

complains of governor Dongan,

for

war

in, ibid

;

in-

formation brought by Anthony Lespenard from, 487

of, VIII., 73.

retain,

IX., 353; the

the Indians instructed to plunder

intelligence of the

New York

Campell, lieutenant, of the

IV., 169, 240, V., 730, 731, of,

;

war

;

nations and, 439, 444, 464, 483, 514,

G45, 776,

of,

Campell, Hamilton, X., 593.

five

;

governor 441

belonging to the colonies taken in the bay of

from,

the Jesuits do their best to

;

Dongan sends

408; mentioned, 493

ds, IV., 200.

sue,

260, 796;

Androfl end iavors to prevent all intercourse

place

of, in

colonel, 776.

VIII., 657, 661, 682, 726;

Campbell lord

affairs in

incursions

from, 190;

V

between the eastern Indians and, 265

retire to,

VII., 562.

on

ate

by governor Dongan

629, 630.

rent

New York

.'•

1

draw the

X., 729; notice of, ibid.

Campbell of Isla, captain Lauchlin, case Campbell, lieutenant, killed at Niagara,

number

,



treats with the Indians, 782, 785, 786; brigadier-gene-

VIII.,

152

In,

the northern bounds of

notice of, Ibid.

Campbell of Strachur, lieutenant-colonel John,

ral,

147

,

Ived


l

designs of the French to establish forts from

;

Louisiana

going

numbers

sir

late

at

-

in great

William John bold- Indian Niagara and Detroit after the reduction

699; the

colom! Guy Johnson proposes

702;

to,

he receives

707, 726, 758;

to,

by a mes-

letters

senger from, 711; major-general Starke goes to, 806

Mohawks remove

governors

IX.,

of,

to,

vii,

m

816;

is

the French

oi

783,784, 785,791, 797,803;

French

of,

stands French, necessary

590 in,

the a

;

for,

579;

western Indians

who under-

from the appointment of a protestanf bishop to, 593; recommendation to endow a protestant bishop and in,

600, 609; the In-

dian policy changed by the reduction

of,

603;

to be

tie-

world, 14; re-

divided into ten provinces, 15

Frame, ibid; an earthquake

;

map

troops

in, 16;

sent to, 25, 43, 52, 232, 373.X., 276, 278, 285; forts to

be built

591; benefits to accrue

clergy out of the Jesuit estates

13; the finest and greatest stab' in

commended

26; manufactures and education to

in, IX.,

of,

Jeffery

bishop

instructions to Mr. Gandais, royal commissioner to, 9 report j of baron d'Avaugouron, 13,20; a bishopsentto,

cap-

French

the

;

proposed Indian department

incited by the

I

I

the Bis nations offer to prevent the

ot, sent to

Amherst, 548; nearly reduced by the live

subjects,

Great Britain, 588;

to

adopt*

ishment of

j

if in

tain Clans holds an Indian congress in, 512: message to the

measure

;

;

;

cated to

troops

'



17

French

420; wholly reduced, 447; conduct of the

in,

six nations in the to

Allan

America

tie-

army

ihi

to,

Johnson

fort

at

Seheoas and Delawares invited

to the

..i

colonel

itli

the most vigorous'measures about to be

against, 199;

tin'

itb

the expeditioi

supplied indireotly by the Dutch »

;

message from theOneidas to 132; sir William Johnson sends war parties

of,

IT.;,

198,

I

strength of the Indi J

provisions, 82;

to,

oi

i

land

preparations for attaoking the British ooloniea

;

making ernor

,

N. u tie-

effects

be encouraged

in,

2S

;

seldom sick

people

its

northern limits unknown, 30

d.ni.d the inhabitants

Carignan regiment in,

the right

ibid;

in,

of,

settle

31

;

of

the soldiers of the

32; >hip> can

in,

;

trading

be built

35; France must not be depopulated in favor

of,

39; privileges granted the inhabitants of, 40 capable of producing all the necessaries of life, 41; ;

importance of introducing mechanics in, 42; M. measures to be de Calliere governor of, 45, 099 ;

tor the security of,

adopted

53; reports of Mr. Talon

resulting to the Indian trade from the reduction of,

on, 55, 71, 74; census of, in 1666, 1G67, 1668, 57,

G13, 999, VIII., 83; colonel Bradstreet's expedition

CI;

accompanied by Indians from, VII., 656; merchants of, complain of the purchase of a fort and

to,

cxtensive # tract of land at Green bay, 817; settlement

coins authorized to be struck in, 70; in great need of

to Detroit

of the boundaries between

New York

and, S74, 875;

licenses to trade with Indians obtained by

merchants from, S77

New York

governors Moore and Carleton

;

trad.'

ordered,

saw

New York

and, 885

954

;

;

William Smith, chief

state

justice of,

of the Indian trade in, VII.,

proceedings for the settlement of the boundary

between

New York and, VIII.,

3

;

grants

made on

lake

6'3

mills.

n'7 ;

search

;

111

for

;

girls senl

exploring expeditions

progress

72;

of

from France

and copper mines

iron

fitted

out

population

in,

originally belonged to the Algonquins, 78

;

in,

64;

73,89; exposed

the Jesuits first carried the faith to, ceo not to be planted in,S9; a ship begun

condition of, 80

request the confirmation of the boundary lines between

909, V1IL, 594;

with, opened,

64,

62,

to

be

built

meeting

oi

;

in,

ibid; scarcity of

women

tie clergy, noblesse, judiciary

estate held in, 91

;

population

de Frontenac reports on, 116

of, in ;

90

in,

;

a

and third

1673, 115

;

count

change in the land

; ;

;; ;

GENERAL INDEX.

112 Canada

— continued.

population and trade

granting department

land received

137

in,

land pioprietors

country,

that

190

;

of,

in 1679

;

ordained

in,

de Frontenac

left

Jesuit

first

when count

of letters from,

abstract

;

vanity of

;

extent of the Indian trade

the

;

state of affairs in,

;

population

;

contradicted, 139

;

151

in,

carried on from, 153

171

119

of,

news of the war between Fiance and Eng-

136, 142;

196

;

;

;

207

to establish parishes in,

;

population

New York

210

;

the English of

212

;

M. de Meulles intendant

of, in

1683,

begin to trade

214

of,

to,

amount

;

of

in

of,

approved, 779

English colonies and, ibid, 1029 781

to,

reannexed

;

810

in,

M. de Bou-

;

made from,

discoveries

;

New England

an expedition on foot

;

population

and, 809

despotism

;

against, 831, 835, 859

in 1709, 833; its condition

of,

the

French

of the

negotiate a treaty of neu-

efforts to

;

between

title

;

and, 770

expeditions to discover the

;

South sea sent from, 789 trality

proposed

;

between

crown, 784

to the

teroue intendant of, 787

757

forbidden

trade

all

;

1703,

New England

treaty of neutrality between

790, 791, 793

trade to be Huguenots prohibited settling in, 199 encouraged between the West Indies and, 201 M. Franquelin engaged on a map of, 205 efforts making

;

in 1709,

abandoned, 842; escapes invasion by the wreck of the English fleet, 862 military ginseng discovered in, 882 force of, in 1716, 868 840; the invasion

of,

;

;

appropriations for the year 1684 for, 222; foreigners

census

excluded from the fur trade

emigration

strength of the" expedition against, 930, X., 12; sup-

from, to the English colonies forbidden, ibid, 224;

ports the Abenakis in their war with the English, IX.,

abuses

of,

277

;

bad

state of

223

in,

276

of, IX.,

morals

of the noblesse

;

in, 278,

279

state of, in

;

return of beaver exported from, 287;

1685, 280;

discovered by the French, 303

first

;

181, 937, 960, 961, 963;

X., 180,

229,

in,

character of the youth

granted to a

;

trading company, 304; no protestants in, 312;

ber of troops in 1686

316

314

in,

many gentlemen

;

culties of, in

;

population

memoir

;

report on the affairs

;

strangers to be forbidden to remain or reside in, 985

ship-building encouraged

force of, in 1740, 1068

the conquest of Acadia, X., 4; cause of the failure of

the expedition in 1711 against, 10

342

;

state

required for, 13

in,

;

early

17

census

;

New

rations for the invasion

in,

;

in 1746, 1747, 89

527; infested by Iroquois, 431, 503

plans against, 100

;

;

the defense

the settlements of intelligence

character of the clergy of, 442

447

of,

invaded, 455

;

1689, 1690 in, 462

;

plan for

occurrences during

;

New

three expeditions against

;

England and New York organized in, 464; paper money issued in, 497; low condition of, 503; state of, in

1691, 508

mended

;

population

of,

1690, 1691 in, 513

;

number

in,

of wolves

509

510

for the defense of,

measures recom-

;

occurrences during

;

suffers

from famine, 519

531

military operations

;

menaced, 540, 543, 667;

1691, 1692 in, 534;

Mohawk

expedition against the

occurrences in 1692, 1693

a

;

555

;

loss of, 644

;

in,

occurrences during 1697, 1698 panies of infantry

725

in,

;

in,

67s

plan lor

;

tie'

invasion of

from,

intendant

736; M. de Vaudreuil governor

of,

;

;

number of com-

New England

7.'Jo

664

M. de Beauharnois appointed of,

742,

758; the English about to invade, 743, 817; letters of

marque issued by the French

in,

744; hostilities always

of,

755

;

commenced

roads to be opened

in,

756

;

;

journal of captain

97 general Shirley's ;

continued incursions of Indians

;

sent from France to, 110

fleet

prepa-

;

move-

the

;

ments of the Pretender cause the abandonment of the invasion of, 122 foreign negroes to be sent to the ;

West

Indies

131

from,

1747, 1748, 137 Indies from, 138

occurrences

;

runaway slaves sent

;

;

to

during

in,

West

to the

return of artillery in, 195

from the galleys recommended

be sent

convicts

;

to,

204; the

the communication between

English design cutting

off

Louisiana and, 220

objections to preserving, 221

224

640; causes which may lead to the in,

threatened, 93

;

43

in,

journal of occurrences

visit to (noticed),

;

importance of preserving, 222

occurrences

occurrences during 1696, 1697

a

;

France,

despatches from, 633, 634; occurrences

during 1695, 1696

;

54

in

in 1694 in, 577; occurrences in 1694, 1695 in, 594; abstract of

102

of,

an

villages from, 550

in, 550,

Phineas Stevens'

into,

military operations

;

levies for Beaubassin

munitions of war arrive

York from, urged, 419 count de Frontenac ordered embark for, 423 further reports on, 428, 430, 440, ;

new

;

additional troops

;

1744 sent to France,

of, in

regiments sent to defend, 27

;

398

from, 434

preservation depends on

its

;

317

inroads of the Iroquois into, 402; invasion of

;

;

of troops

diffi-

raised in, 41

summary

number

;

1686,

in 1745, 1746 in, 32, 38

be concentrated, 432;

1025

in,

;

the Indian war in, 388; slavery authorized

in, to

instructions

;

;

discoveries in, 378; and grants in, 379; progress of

to

952

of,

M. de Beauharnois, governor of, 956 papers relating to the boundary between New York and, 960; to

in 1734 in, 1040; census of, in 1734, 1046; military

in,

severe sickness in, 354, 743

;

937, 945

in 1719, 896; in 1720, 898; in 1721, 907;

on, 319

experienced in forming villages

1687, 346

of,

num-

of, in

want of bread

.in

cause of their misery, 318



[Can-

;

223;

a

rampart

to

;

;

always a burden to

Louisiana and Mexico,

and the granary of the tropics, ibid necessity communication between it and the Mississippi, a great many people ought to be sent to, 232 ;

of free

229

;

class of persons to be sent to, ibid; instructions to

M. Duquesne, governor of, 242; news

of the reduction

of fort Necessity received in, 260; capitation

271

;

population

Courts)

;

on, 291;

297

;

of,

in

1754,

;

courts

journal of M. de Vaudreuil's

(see

voyage

an account of what occurred in 1755

in,

list of,

in

the English unceasing in their usurpations

M. de Montcalm appointed

army

275

to

the

in,

command

to,

381

of the

393; occurrences in from 1755 to 1756, 397,

401; abstract of despatches from, 407, 423; small

;

-Can]


in

I

of,

against the proprietors of, 1176

VII., 280. Carlisle (Pennsylvania),

George Croglian

head quarters

nel Stanwix's

at,

at,

VII., 2S0

284, 285

;

;

troops sent

Carmarthen, Francis Godolphin [Osborne] marquis ries lady Amelia D'Arcy, VI., 757.

of,

mar-

Carolina, granted to

the governor

Richmond county

militia,

1

war with the 415

in,

I

to

e

south

mediate with

favor of the Tuscaroras, ibid; the

of, in

nations at

five

Flatheai

governor Hunter

;

calls

on the

five-

nations to put a stop to the war in, 417, 418,420, 442, in a deplorable condition

;

from

1

the French

;

reputed number of the

the war in, 430; tire

IV., 809.

(New York),

governor Hunter requested

;

of the Indians, 422, 431

Carney, James, X., 593. Carolana

a

376

443

Carmarthenshire, George Rice represents, VII., 536.

the Ottaw as

message brought to Ononi

Indian war

(See Leeds, duke of.)

Carmer, Henry, 111., 630. Cannon, Andrew, captain of

204; of,

;

I

V., 76; Daniel Coxe, author of a description of,

of,

colo-

from Pittsburg to, X., 906. Carmarthen, [Thomas Osborne, 1st] marquis of, president of the council, III., 605, 750; governor Fletcher writes to, IV., 72.

Lyon

;

dollars very general from Pennsylvania to, house of lords address the queen on com

with the American congress, VIII., 763.

governor

|

i

;

being brought under the crown, 1059

its

91 -

.

ordered to look to the public defenses, 965

board of trade, IIL.xix; commissioner to negotiate Carlisle (England), lieutenant colonel Stanwix,

pitch

788; North and South, under propriel

6th] earl of, one of the privy

[Frederick Howard, 8th] earl

I

ol

proprietors obliged to defend, 833

229, 230, 257.

council, V., 412. Carlisle,

witi

trad
uili

I

238,

Kennedy, llth]

Caasilis, [Arohibald

tils

600

,

rivei

Cassan, Messnier,

Cast, John,

L28

to,

the rive nations intend

;

407

the French attack

;

near, 426, IX, 535

why gov

;

ernor Fletcher did not destroy, IV., 449; impossicapturing

bility of

487, V., 75, 731

496, 499

;

it,

473, 474, 486

a stone fort

;

at,

an instance of French perfidy, IV.,

;

a terror to the live nations, 505

;

Indian

prisoners in Canada allowed to go hunting as far as,

arakue, Cadaraqua, Cadaraqui, Cadaraquin, Cadara-

572, 574; Indians invited

by the governor of Canada M. Maricour ar-

quy, Cadarchqui, Cadarogque, Cadarokoui, Cadaruch-

to, sent

que, Caddaraque, Caderachqui, Caderaoqui, Cadera-

rives at, 598

qni, Caderaquy,

Catarachqua,

639, 640, IX., 358; built on the road to the Indian

Catarackqui, Cataracoui, Cataracouy, Cataracque, Ca-

hunting grounds, IV., 651 three days' journey from Tohonade, 655 ; a fort ordered to be built at Onon-

Cadraqua,

Cadraqui,

taracqui, Cataract, Cataracwa, Cataragque, Cataraque,

Cataroque,

Cattaraque,

Chadarachqui,

Kadaraghie,

prisoners to France, 579 ;

;

supplied from Onondaga, 618

fortified,

;

;

daga

to protect the

Indians against, 656

;

Diondori,

Kadaraghkie, Kaderaohque, Kadraghkie, Kalaroque, Quadarachqui, Quadraqui), III., 431, 432, 433, 435,

an

437, 440, 445, 592, 621, SOS, 814, 817, IV., 373, 464,

operations of governors La Barre

a source of annoyance to the English, 701 the earl of Bellomont recommends the Indians to assisl in

thrown

building a fort for their protection against, 736; a

V., 85, 243, 245

and Deuonville into, III., 455,

;

at, III.,

396, IX., 273; stores

473; the governor of Canada's expla-

nation respecting the victualing

of,

458; the

five

na-

tions invited to, 465, 470, IX., 322; the five nations

prevented by governor Dongan from going

to, III.,

officer at,

657

smith sent

to,

a fort built

at,

470; the traders

burn houses and take

a

;

a party of the

number

of pri-

Onondagas trade

at,

661

799, 803; goods sent for the Indian

the river of, S36

873

;

some foi

and, cut at,

247

;

;

the French have a regular fort

of the five nations

VI., 736, 970;

;

the

trade to, 804; the French about to build two forts on

large force to, 475

the far Indians ordered to, 478

;

;

French

among

the French invite the five nations

to settle near, 658, 660

467, 470; the governor of Canada proceeds with a

five nations

;

off,

building a fort

892

900,

;

V

at,

excuse of the ,

75, 792, 908,

communication between Niaga a

all

V., 76

at,

at,

;

some Waganhaes commit murder

reverend Mr. Durant

at,

5S8, 591

;

distance jf

;

GENERAL INDEX.

124 Cataraqui — continued.

Indians go to war to Virginia Quinte from, 589 from, 660 dangers of the voyage between Montreal

the vote

;

IV., 159

;

and, 728

route from Albany

;

910; a strong fort

at,

to be sent to, 276, 281

from, 423

French Indians hunt war colonel Johnson in danger

;

some Indians

river and, 569

Ohio from, 729

549

1755, 969

730

at,

neighborhood

135

of,

;

240

at,

naval arma-

;

ments and stores destroyed at, 349 the French determined to make a stand below, 383 Americans assisted ;

;

in the reduction

616

of, VIII.,

resolves to found

an establishment

count de Frontenac arrives sion

at,

120

;

at,

102

101;

IX.,

at,

at,

282

English

;

287; part of the garrison deserts, 290; captain M. de la Salle Dorvilliers' company garrisons, 308 ;

benefited by the trade

310; abandoned, 432; ex-

at,

pense of repairing the fort at, 633 father Vaillant goes from Albany to, 672 Outaouais established :it, the regiment of Beam at, X., 347 the five na816 ;

;

;

;

tions desire to be supplied

821; the English

(See Fort Frontenac.)

to, 907, 909.

Catawba

river,

503; the English take,

at,

from, 853; force to be sent

retire

whites and Indians, VII., 658, 661.

Catelina, a Spanish slave, sold in

New

III.,

683.

Netherland,

31.

Cathcart, Charles, 8th lord, appointed

commander

expedition against the Spaniards, VI., 162, 167

;

of,

fleet, I

,

;

;

list

of clearances sent

476; to furnish information to the secretary of 530

;

Mr. Holland recommended for a seat in

the council at the request

province of

a

list

New York,

645

of, ;

587

;

secretary of the

applies for leave of ab-

sence for governor Clinton, 726

;

agent for governor

Clinton, 768, 770.

few in Catholics, in Maryland in 1677, number of, III., 253 New York in 1686, 415 in commission in New York, 640,641; encouraged by the quakers, 656; the first ;

;

few,

names fur. number of, in

of their

a great

;

on the west end of lake

of,

to

Erie, IX.,

watch the English Smyrna I.,

541; mentioned,

II.,

760.

Catshathondatha, a Seneca chief, Cattle,

New

774.

Netherland adapted to the raising

New

domestic, of

new

III.,

farm, 367;

246;

New

required in

Netherland,

3tJ8

;

not be exported from New Netherland, encouragement held out in New Netherland

prices of, 369

389, 419

of, I.,

Netherland, 277; necessary for a

;

;

for raising, 401; destroyed in the Indian war, 413;

sent to

New

Netherland, 430

attempted to be sent to

;

421; captured by the English,

II.,

433,496; none sent to the South river, 434 sent to New England to purchase, 492; in in

;

Canada

in 1719, 896

;

to

agents

;

Illinois,

in 1720, 898

;

in

(See Animals.)

1721, 907.

to purchase land at,

Albany from,

III.,

I

,

532

Van

der

people

;

592; the authorities of Al-

for the Indians of, 816

;

Indians living

at,

the eastern boundary of the Iroquois country,

;

VII., 573.

Caubotera, La, a Spanish slave sold in

471

if

that colony

482.

bany send

marries Eli-

;

state, 528,

;

Cats, Jacob, biographical sketch of,

notice

zabeth Elliot, VIII., 96.

to,

number

commander, ordered

fly

Catherwood, doctor, VII., 178, 232. Catherwood, Mr., secretary to governor Clinton, VI., 312, sent with despatches to England, 468 let464, 771 to,

when

(See Animals.)

886. Cats,

IV., 902

Cathcart, [William, 10th baron and 1st] earl

Canada

in

Catosauk, a Skaticook sachem, V., 228. Cats, a great

of an

187.

governor Clinton

;

York,

takes lieutenant Staats prisoner, IX., 838.

,

Donck attempts

Cathcart, Allan, 7th lord, VI., 187.

ter of

528

New

Cattskill (Caats Kill, Hattskill, Katskill), Adriaen

Catharine town (New York), VIII., 785.

of,

to,

in

;

(See Papists.)

Acadia, 995.

Catnaret,

IX., 891

II.,

the history of the

;

Catling, Seth, VII., 903.

the South river,

proposed as part of the boundary between the

Catechism, political, specimen of an early,

407

of,

nished to the intendant, ibid

traders found on lakes Erie and Ontario, to be sent to,

;

;

number

government in Canada, 741

a Recollect mis-

;

description of the fort

of the, in

;

count de Frontenac

;

list

New

in

of,

;

condition

news of the French designs

;

small- pox

;

invaded and taken, IX., 425; the English and Dutch opposed to the religion of, 440 in the city of New York, 549 who refuse to return to New England, naturalized in Canada, 700; assisted by the

VII., 28; a spy sent to, 95; a French force in the

received from, 239

to

England,

is

of demolishing,

beneficial effects

;

;

of,

names

made

to

York, 166, 310 a planted on the Ohio, VII., 165 in Penn160

not to be disturbed by the French

;

the six na-

;

news from, 968

;

governor Fletcher transmits a

;

allowed religious liberty, 540

a party sets out for the

;

a ship building

;

tions invited to, 784, 787 of, in

to,

New York

negro plot, tinctured with hostility

424

the French settle below, 589, 779,

;

an army passes, 706

;

move

to

of an objection being

sent from

;

sylvania in 1759,

the land between the Grand

own

the five nations

colony

;

VI., 126; munitions of

674

of,

New York,

equi-distant

;

belts sent to the six nations from,

;

captain Celoron invites

856

729

to,

from Montreal and Albany, 730 at,

[Cat-

New York,

instance, in

New

Netherland,

II.,

31.

Caughnegarighsey, Indian

name

of Mr. Atkins, VII., 241,

242.

Caumont, Legardeur, assists in the taking possession Upper Mississippi, IX., 418. Caumont, lieutenant

de,

wounded

at the siege of

of the

fort St.

Philip, X., 432.

" Causes of the Present Rebellion in America," doctor Cooper preaches a sermon on the, VIII., 298. Cavagnale, M. de, third son of the Marquis de Vaudreuil, visits Niagara, V.,

589, 590.

(See

Vaudreuil- Cav-

agnal.) Cavalier, Louis

le,

an Indian interpreter, X., 187, 188.

GENERAL [NDEX.

-Our] the, « lab pai

,

v,*i

1

1

at

i

i

,,

ter,

.

i

I

ol

,

It.

la Salle, IX.,

de

,

retui n i" the


•'-;

at,

of East Jersey, of

III., II.,

for 1744,

sent to

250, 815, VII., 582, IX., 1052.

607.

New

Jersey, superstitious objection against taking, V.,

777

of that province in 1726, 819.

;

of the province of

398

;

New York,

in 1698, IV., 420

;

ordered to be taken,

III.,

expect, d to be taken, 1079

transmitted by lord Cornbury, V., 50 the general sickness throughout

;

in 1712. 339

New York

;

;

attributed

;

nearer, VI., 218; dis-

to the taking of the, ibid

;

difficulty of obtaining a

;

;

GENERAL INDEX.

126 Census '

— continued.

correct,

VI., 133

[Cen—

Chamberlayne, John, advises the lords of trade that the

459; for 1723, 702; in 1731, 929; in 1737, why delayed, 524 in 1749, in 1746, 392 ;

;

;

society for the propagation of the gospel in foreign

send two missionaries to the

parts, are about to

nations of Indians, IV., 1077

550.

(See Popu-

North American colonies, VI., 993.

of the

Centibouck

1078

governor Hunter's

;

(See Company.)

the.

Lewis Morris

river, VIII., 32.

Chamberlayne,

Ceremonies observed on the occasion of erecting a statue of George

in

III.

New York,

VIII., 245.

Certificate of the election of the eight

mandamus on

service of a

men,

I.

,

192

of the

;

of his majesty's

allowance for the garrison of

York,

of the clergy of

278

III.,

;

New York

regarding the

to,

V., 312

letter of

;

defense of governor Hunter, 318.

Thomas, member of the council

sir

for

trade, III., 31.

Chambers, Abraham Gaesbeek, IV., 938, 1006, 1010. Chambers, captain, brings tea to New York, VIII., 431

tea

;

brought by, destroyed, 488.

director Stuyvesant, 352

that director Stuyvesant took the oath of office, 492

to, in

letter

New York,

episcopal clergy of

lation.

Cent Associes, company of

five

secretary to the society,

;

;

New

in favor

Chambers, John, advises a Jew to compromise injuries received from Oliver de Lancey in a riot, VI., 471

recommended

New York

a seat in the

for

council,

Flypse and Steven van Cortlandt, that captain Leisler

second judge of the supreme court, 737, 804 member of the congress at Albany, 853, et seq. ; asks

took a packet of despatches addressed to lieutenant-

to be appointed chief justice, VII., 445; brother of

of Messrs. Cortland and Bayard, 588

governor Nicholson, 649

;

of Frederick

;

of governor Fletcher, in

favor of Depeyster and Livingston's claims, IV., 117 of colonel

Dongan

Shelton Broughton and his son, V., 51

;

;

;

Chambers, ibid

admiral

bench, 528

death

;

resigns

;

his

on the

seat

of, 675.

;

in favor of Mr. Livingston, 130;

of attorney-general Northey, in relation to

728

Chambers, Thomas,

III., 75.

Sampson Chambers, admiral William, judge Chambers

of captain

brother

New

of

York,

VII., 445.

of,

X., 592. de Celeron that he had expelled the English traders Chambers, from the Ohio, VI., 532 of governor Clinton, about Chamblain river, VI., 582. governor of Acadia, M. de, Chambly, of the Pittsfield comrolling mills in New York, 604 ,

;

;

mittee, against all proceedings at law for the collec-

tion of debt, VIII., 652; that the New York records had been received on board the sbip Duchess of Gor-

don, 760

of the fidelity of the Indians of the Sault

;

Louis, IX., 542.

St.

Cery, captain,

commands la petite Marguerite,

from Bay Verte

Bay Verte, 56

;

fleet,

;

expected II.,

returns

;

60

;

runs great risks, 61

of being taken by the English, 63

64

;

Quebec, 53 sent with supplies to bearer of despatches to the commander to

of the French

Cesar, Andries,

X., 45

at

;

;

in danger

burns his vessel,

1031, 1032.

Chabert.

a Delaware village, X., 589.

commands

X.,

351

;

to build forts at,

X., 119

;

Sueur commands

at,

;

point,

(See Point Chagouamigon.)

Barre's expedition, 235

where he amassed a

;

440, to

517; mentioned, 803, 804, 805, IV., captain Schuyler arrives at, 404, 405, 406 a ;

way

the English, 1164; condition of the fort of, in

1709, 86; a stone fort ;

to attack

V., 85

at,

;

168, 571,

at,

distance of Laprairie from, V., 729

;

taken by the Americans, VIII., 647 captain de St. Ours stationed at, IX., 130; those going to Albany to ;

pass by, 145

;

a guard stationed

;

at,

Iroquois besiege the fort

Frontenac requested ;

146

particulars

;

515,

of,

Desbergeres in

390

at,

make smooth

to

Mohawks make an

;

count de

the path to,

incursion into the neighbor-

X., 102; revictualled,

IX.,

command

distance from

large fortune, 291

formed

at,

at,

563;

its

;

556; M.

;

;

governor de

;

842; a post of consequence, 851

nant de Rouville, commands near, abandoned, 103

accompanies governor de la absconds from Canada, 290

Denonville complains of his impunity, 326. Cbailly, ensign de, IX., 83.

III.,

impossible

four children taken by

a road to be opened to, 756 threatened, 833; preparations to defend, 834; an encampment

IX., 611

Indians at the siege of fort William Henry,

Chailly, captain de, IX., 194;

;

at,

Albany, 726

Chadderton, William, IV., 27. le

;

489

at,

Martinique, 212.

487;

party of Indians pass through, on their

hood

Chacornales, lieutenant, IX., 714.

630.

the Indians

466

41.

Chagouamigon, M.

passage

close the

of

fort built at, at,

;

la petite Marguerite,

Chadakoiu, VI., 836 the French propose (See Lake Chadakoin.) 857.

governor

;

Chambly (Shamble, Shamblie), a 476; Anthony Lispenard

post, 349

(See Joncaire.) captain,

ransomed, 120

respecting the seigniory of, 212; a fortified post to be established at, 315 ; to be inclosed, 343 a frontier

33.

Chaamonaqui,

;

VI., 126, IX., 846

Cession of lands from the Cherokees to South Carolina, VIII.,

IX., 87; the oldest

;

;

793

population

Minas, 65.

698.

Cesar6e, a Recollect lay brother, accusations against, IX.,

Chaboisseau,

Canada, 98

accompanies count de Frontenac to lake Ontario, 100 taken by buccaneers, 119, officer in

at,

843.

;

at,

X., 86

the regiment of

;

;

lieute-

settlements

Beam

arrives

(See Fort Chambly.)

Chambredoude (Chamredon),

captain, killed, X., 750, 798.

Chamillart de Cany, M., minister of war, X.,

vi.

Chamillart, Michel, junior, minister of war, X., troller general, vii.

vi,

con-

;

;

GENERAL INDEX.

•Cha] >ttawa as Chamlndiwaj Croghan at Detroit, vn [X., 52. Chamot, M killed bj the Mod iwi Champagne, Serjeant, oommanded the ttrsl I

,

i

.

oolone!

irith

I

ne.

Frontenao, 211

fori

at

;

i

de

non

D
h\

01 I

Colden, Cadwallader

L45

pamphl

continutd,

pinion on

tlonlai I

of

al irs

oommon

oourts of

lav La

1

refusing

for

remai

»

1

obey

appi

unphlet

ohlof justii

to

i

first

-

*

a]

New York, 676; p

fork oontainin

67

H,

oo lords

a

N

luted In

pi

to tie.

tie

i

212, -1«,

appeal,

of

writ

679

216,218, 245, 248, 249;

bit

,

tie

tin

and attorney

190, 198, 201, 205,

ernment

attention of the go\

709

to

back

New fork, 708;

i"

New

affairs in

forth by Hi

York,

reports the

of [lchester and others,

irl

an

Indian

588;

e|-, 528, 530, 531, 543,

:.l",

Led

letters oi

7-11

;

grant

put

3

.sir

informs the secretary of state of

;

mits a draft of a royal chart

of sir

New York,

the stamps, 768; burnt

up

stamped papers

the

773;

oalls

to the

anonymous and threatening the government to oi

sir

letter to, ibid; delivers

New York,

604;

losses,

mplains

;

up

;

his age,

the port of

iii

..|'

on Long island,

lives

continued persecutions, 994

on the pamphlet state of tlie

of,

;

995;

886

91(3

;

;

pamphlet,

4;

to the

New York assembly,

>7

of establishin

cessity

767,

.1

799

,

in,

the,

stamp

tin'

oi'

non-im-

;

into

t

be, 5 L2

Mr.

:

tallow aj

'

807; the British parliament passes an the dependency of the, 823

granted stamp duties ]m\ ise

ili''

solutions passed in

Hi''

about

in

house

house of commons

commons

mi'

factures in,

847;

calls

of

acta

a

for

the

in

the,

Europe in,

94G

889

to the,

m

made

indem-

to

;

;


;

certain

I'M

oedenoy over

ty of

th.' civil

establishing new,

;

power

-•'

smug-

appointed

the earl of Hillsborough

seoretary of state for, VIII., 7

the military claims in the,

16

;

propi

ie-

opinion of the board on

;

trail.'

setts

ii.

u inland,

regulation of the Indian

;

">•",

the respective,

t.i

left

-\>

.".7;

i

several, 58

;

Massachu-

th.'

house of representatives address

assemblies of th

a letter

t.>

the

uon-importation asso-

ciations formed in, 69, SO, L76, 191; private persons in

England

ment, S2; of the, s4

r

sir

ive news from, before th.' governWilliam Johnson's review of th.' state

despatches from

;

tin'

secretary of state to

governors not to be communicated to the of

th.',

loo

;

efforts

making

to create

its

dissensions

oi

used

to subjugati to

tween Great Britain ami, 171 the lords of trade approve of the non-importation movement in ;

194; opinion of the attorney and to

-

the,

solicit..!

proclaim an embargo in

the,

In

the,

to !"• :

"»G8,

569;

in

ei

;

I

firmly re-

authoi

George

587, 592;

omander-in-chi :

the most

\

i

in the,

591

-

im

ii"d

;

the Indians to

more troops

support th

603

ma

to the

be called out against the, 596;

:

ti;"

called

European

. I

th" -i\ nations

""ii

;

commi outgrown then discontinued to the, 635 iterate their

the

;

determination

ment

I

re-

maintain their authority

to

over the, 642; lord George Germaine prini tary of state for the, 647; to bring about

!> -

be-

his

;

uoi

ed to crush the rebellion

res

.li

585

rebellion

Washington a] army in the, 589

to

in,

an army raised

the,

compel obedii

liament, 587;

i

th.t.

.1

parliament insists again on

authority over the, 164; the breach widening

ou the power of the crown

in

;

troops and the

571, 579;

in,

some

1'

tween Great Britain and, 108; the New York assembly deny th.' authority of parliament to bind lonies in all eases, 156;

564

in,

and writers

printers

loyal

to

people

the ereoting of new, 27; arguments in favor of establishing

ions

collision betvi

first

of assembly

duties in the, 980; great quantities of goods

gled into,

omenta

raisb

for

fo

in- relating

of, ibid

members

passes an

from imon de-

future '

hreat

order forbidding any alteration of

thi

;

delegates in

ol

in. "

t'.

562 lature of

an account

uumber

the

d
,

i

New

gov mor riffs,

I

-.,

:

492; of Maryn Adriaensen

i

New

Kryger

n,

Tienhovi

0; visited 6

of Huntington, a

forced

701

;

697

loan,

answers

690

a

;

proclamati

>f,

696

;

impo


\\

in

foot

New 5t"ork,220;

inquire into

to

o

[holes to be

ibid;

t>4;

1

Edmund

IT;

Dieskau, X., 285

and,

con

Robert Carr

de

ille

America,

aco

for

:

to

;

marquis de Montcalm

the

father Druilli

i

intendant of justice, police and finance in Canada, 22; ns ol

to\i

ami Woodbri

be



M. Jean de Water,

a

irti

13

1

the tn at}

to

New

o7; their commission, 04; I

nounced

by the general court of Massachusetts, 95; their

pi

report

the secretary of state, 96, 101,

;

GENERAL INDEX.

152

— continued.

Commissioners 106

further controversy between Massachusetts and,

;

[Com-

572; in 1721, 635; their conference with western Indians, 693 their report on the petition of the Lon;

Indian trade, 740;

98,99,107; settle matters in Maine, 108; report of the, on Massachusetts, 110; governor Nicolls trans-

don merchants on the subject names of the, in 1724, 742,

mits the papers connected with their transactions at

advise the government of the further encroachments of

money nor credit, 115; governor Nicolls reports the course

Boston, 114; have neither

116

recalled,

;

the French, 909

country, 911

of the

in 1726, 780,

791, 794;

their letter to traders in the

;

Seneca

report that the French have seized

;

their answer to queries

pursued by Massachusetts towards the, 136; defense of Massachusetts from the charges of the, 139 sent

Crown

io inquire into the troubles at Esopus, instructions to

by the French at Crown Point, 131 inform the government of the design of the French to settle at Wood creek, 144, 146; names of, in 1743,232,233,235,238,

;

the, 149

governor Nicolls explains some of the pro-

;

ceedings of the, 158

Mr. Maverick's report on the

;

Point, 928;

board of trade, VI., 126

;

actions of the, 173; settle the limits of the several

241, 251

colonies, 240

governor Clinton, ibid

Breclon, 270

c iptain

meet

at

Rhode

ting the

York,

settlement approved, 241

;

;

from

different colonies,

about to

Island, to consider of the prosecu-

war against the French, 70G

meet

;

at

on the subject of quotas,

agree

732;

lodge with

;

invited to meet governor Sloughter, 785

New

governor Fletcher to

at fort

853, 860, 861, 863, 864, 871

,

by

Indian

73, 74;

Indian

;

629, 630

625,

;

to

the boundaries

settle

between the French and English in America,

III.,

504,

IV., 402, 404,453, 546, 580, VIII., 57S, IX., 314, 322,

330, 667, X., 217

their names, III

;

pondence, 506-510 IX., 371, 689

;

subjects

;

,

505

their corres-

;

for their deliberation,

their labors cut short, 428; evidence to

be submitted to, 694;

ads of

all

hostility to be

mean-

while suspended, 697. (See Boundaries.)

lib, 314;

engaged

sir

Edmund Andros and

to,

on

Mr. Dyre,

in considering the affairs of

York, 317, 340; suggest amendments to certain

York

New New

348; and transmit their opinion on

acts, 341,

other points concerning that provincej 349-353.

New

into the titles of certain lands in

Jersey, V., 758.

of Indian affairs, appointed at Albany, IV., 177, 362 mes;

five

sent

;

misrepresent of,

nations from the, 491

;

minutes of their

to,

New York,

691; propositions from the Canada praying In-

dians to the, 692 guilty of 751

690; memorial of the five nations

;

;

from the

five

nations to the, 693

unfair practices, 716; instructions to the,

send spies lo Canada, V., 85; names

oi'

the, in

1711,220,228,229; transmit intelligence of French intrigues

a1

Onondaga, 212; inform governor Hunter

of an attach

by French Indians in the neighborhood

of Albany, 281

;

names

of ling in 17)5,

a

Letter to

16

;

message

New

England, referred

name of

New ,

names

of the, in 1720,

un-

York, appointed

602,

for collecting the revenue,

608, 617, 641, 672, IV., 356; to superin-

tend the building of a fort in the country of the Onondagas,

to

examine the public

New

York, 775, 1004; to

783; appointed

713,

accounts of the province of

execute the office of receiver-general, 973; appointed for the purchase of provisions for the expedition against ;

refuse to deliver provisions except at

Albany, 655; the sheriff of Albany breaks open the stores of the, 656; Mr.

structions dert's

to,

Colden threatens the, 657

664; refuse provisions

company, 688

to captain

;

in-

Stod-

appointed for various services

;

New

York, VI.,

684; of con-

from Rhode Island, appointed to inquire into the irreguthey report, 601, larities of that government, IV., 600 ;

Royal, for restoring peace to the colonies, their appoint-

ment authorized,

VIII., 640;

loyal addresses presented to,

in

New York,

692

;

686, 747;

numbers on bong

island sign the declaration prescribed by, 694;

in-

structions to, 738. for

Trade and plantations. (See Trade, Lords

of Customs.

601),

of the Indian interests, 570;

to

;

275.

from

Committee

;

five nations,

;

uames of the, in 1719,

-10.';

with

to treat

general court, [.,266 how composed, 267; director StuyvesanCs negotiations with, 458, 460 (see New England; Stuyvesant) their correspondence with governor Andros, III., 273, 274,

der the

colonel Schuyler on the state

of the five nations to the,

528; address

1

meet, VIII.,

to

VI., 267. of the united colonies of

spiracies appointed, VIII., 652.

ernor of

William Johnson,

fail

of, 605.

by the assembly of

letter of the, to the lieutenant-gov-

;

by the continental congress

port

654;

sir

715

proceedings, 567, 575, 597; sent to the five nations, reoi the,

how they managed

19; restored, 20;

713

Canada, VI., 651

of forfeited estates (England), send an agent to inquire

sage to the

;

interested in the trade

;

from Massachusetts, attend a meeting of the

111

of duke of York's revenue, report of law officers

the charges against

affairs,

affairs,

714; the Indians complain

288

attend the congress at

to

deprived of the management of

;

the sis nations, proceedings

on boundaries between New Netherland and Maryland proposed, II., 83 between New York and Connecticut appointed,

of Indian matters, 821;

their records, 854

Canada, VII., 16

;

;

ordered

secretary

their

Albany with

to the treaty

;

refuse to act under complain of Mr. Lydius, 650

;

resume the superintendence

to

Stanwix, VIII., 112.

Indian traders, 439

all

New

refuse to attend, 873, 874; attend a congress at Al-

bany, VI

;

751;

called

;

York, IV., 37, 56,

of the

report the erection of a fort

;

(See Customs

of safety in 1117,

New

of.)

)

York, lib, 597, 598, 604, 608,

643, 670; refuse to meet, 620; their repre-

sentation to the secretary of state, 629

;

their journal

;; ,

GENERAL INDEX.

-1\>N I

Committee of order i i

\

680

i

K)7; elected

.

proposes bers

In

a general

"i, tii"

Van New

.

in>u,

the stockholders of the

adopt charter

an advantageous of,

affairs

West

of the,

I.,

by 94,

of the, ordered,

India

,

New Netherland, 22 New Netherland,

difficulties

141

between the

West India company and

the, II., 236; charges brought by the English against the, 264 required to ;

report

its

opinion on the proposal to give up

Netherland, 348, 353, 356.

20

;

2,'!,

;

;

an

permitted to send

recommend the and ask

to

colo-

be assisted

Hudson's

Canada, drive the English from

recommended

bay, IX., 428;

443

to cooperate with

recommended

the inteudant

;

tend the meetings of the, 444

;

employ M.

M.

to at-

d'lljerville

to attack fort Nelson, 453.

the, a chief cause of disaffection 18,

,

22

;

among

the

build a fort at Red Stone creek,

269.

Swedish, the Dutch West India company originally interested in the,

New Sweden,

I.,

demands

146;

242

II.,

resolution

;

restitution of

of

the

states

general thereupon, 246; settles on the South river, 259.

West West

India (French), established, IX., 22, 785 to,

25

;

succeeds the company of

extent of the grant

;

791

(See West India Company.)

India (Dutch).

granted

;

to,

379

;

;

New

Canada France,

trade to lake St. John,

dissolved, 793.

Comports, M. de, provost of Quebec, IX., 329.

[Compton, Henry,] bishop of London, III., xiv, IV., 129; memorial of, on the churches in the plantations, III., 253; of the privy council, 572; letter of the earl of

Bellomout

to, IV.,

5^0; expresses an interest in the

conversion of the Indians and regrets the banishment

letter to, V.,

311; notice

of,

VII., 363;

commissioners

in the colonies since the time of, 368.

Comyne,

Lindert, VI., 392.

Comyne,

Philip, VI., 392.

Conchehaugah, an Indian

among

the Senecas, IX., 367.

chief, III., 68.

Conchling, Cornelius, ensign of the militia of East Hampton, IV., 808.

(See Koncklyne.)

company Concord (New Hampshire),

resolution with the,

extended, 15S;

819

petition for

11;

1",

I

.barter, 13, 21

Conception, the village of the,

747.

East

',

l"2.">

of the reverend Mr. Dellius, 774; governor Hunter's

France, established, V.,

called the old

mad*

nob

Pi

with two ships of war, 24.

40 trade

to

I

nization of

Indians, VII

115; claims the preemption of

negroes in Guinea, 245

;

cent atsocUt.)

Netherland, grani

N.-»

Ohio land,

Johns, IX., 530.

St.

ppl

dec, IX.,

Looii iana

d'Iberville,

land, IV., 230; incorporated, VII., 566.

si

I

Fran

Northern,

the, VII., 360, 361.

Seneoas, IX., Tin

of tie-,

i.

world by the, v., 660; so

a ship to

(See Ghtmoenapa.)

Companise (Companiste), an Outaonas ol

in the

evi.ie-.iini of their

CDS, 725.

285; incorporated, HI., 23; James

IV., 412.

.

From

the

of N'-u

petitions against the earl of Bellomonl

Virginia,

it

••

rnboina

\

L49.

I.,

Bud

'i

00.'.,

He-

for

IX.,

b..

Common Prayer

the, IV., 604,

'e. n

.

loi

Ill

,

»/'

«

•:

I.

I

fundamental lav of the pro-

Vmk, Yin

.if, t

li),

united India, or Mi-

(See Book

prayer.

Commons,

m

(Bngll

I

.i

mod :n Wei'' 0, IS aland, New Netherland

a fur,

640.

vince of X.u

Gommon

\

M.

line

tin-,

Into an exeou

Cortland, president of the, STork,

oongreas, 438

Lav of England, the

'omiiKiii

changed

;

assure governor Tryon that

1

New York,


j

Mi

.

jmi.

-

-

1

962;

the,

24

on the registership held,

at

de-

;

of,

188,

III.,

about meeting

;

held, IV., 26

Gtoldsboro

;

contesting claims

;

account of

;

New York, by whom

often

ls7

of,

register of, 188

cision of the lords of trade

how

IV., 28, VII.,

of,

Philip Livingston, junior, applies for

;

to the registership of,

sessions,

New

;

constitution of,

Coxe

Albany, 481

before, 218, 219

its

;

justice of, III., juris-

Leisler's adherents prosecuted

the commissioners of the revenue

Van Sweeten

terms in the year, 442

397

in,

collector

;

to he held, ;

sion of,

886

;

683

;

Abraham de

;

Hun-

gerford refuses to submit to a judgment of, 664

777

;

by

Peyster, judge

Atwood preparing to hold a sesspecial session of, recommended,

chief justice

885

;

a

doctor Bridges appointed chief justice

of,

1071

lord Cornbury suspends the chief justice and judges of,

V., 107; the

salaries of the

judges

of,

assembly endeavors judges

877, 878

of,

reduced, 880

;

judges

;

salary of the chief justice of,

bers second judge

of,

728

;

weaken, 844;

to

salaries of the

;

in 1732, 942

of,

holds four terms a year in the city of 10

Incapable

"i

L773, 456;

of, in

New

434

;

meml

as

--iiilii-;

in session at

Johnstown when

Whitehead Hicks

William Johnson died, 480;

594; Thomas Jones, judge

tie-,

(See Courts.)

of, 685.

Courts, Canadian, officers

of,

X., 271, 272, 273, 274.

Netherland, recommended to he established,

New

390

;

provision for appeal from patroons, 404

439

;

erected in

;

South

at the

;

river,

Adrian Van

South

at the

;

172, 580, 620, 621

provision in

;

ticles of capitulation, respecting the

251

;

;

of Fort Orange

and

river,

and pow-

constitution of the, 621, 631; organization II.,

,

forcibly

Tienhoven, clerk of the, 602

ers of,

I

vice-

;

removed from the, Fort Orange, 523 recommended to

Dincklagen

tie-

ar-

judgments of the,

Rensselaerswyok, clerks of

South

appeals from town courts,

river, list of the,

704 (see Ap-

lie to,

proceedings of the, 683, 684, 687, 689, 691,

;

693, 695, 698, 703, 719, 721,

justices of, in 1693, 25;

obtain judgment against Mr. of

taki

York, by

whom

held,

et scq.

III.,

188

in 1677, 260

;

;

pro-

vision for the erection of, 333, 539, 625, 626, 829,857,

an

IV., 268, V., 94, 132, 252, 295, 394, 837, 883; act passed for settling, III., 355

the,

716, IV., 37;

i"

Si

appointed judge of

New

William Trent,

New York, William Pinhorne

diction of, 28, 923;

of,

judges

peals)

,

whom

I" -l"\\

605

associate judge

208;

William Bmith

n"i

;

the, 372; established at the

chief justice of 705.

number

909

413.

powers of the, 28.

Jersey, the, Daniel

V., 204;

of,

supreme,

Bums

deolared

of,

Bol

;

711.,

389;

superior, Massachusetts, procedure of, IV., 930.

supreme,

7"7

794, viil., 319;

he increased, 555

V., 605. prerogative,

the

.-nits tin-

director

lord Baltimore vested with a jurisdiction of,

palatini-,

apj

>;, of,

sir

power

;

ments

assembly, L92; Mr. Ludlow appointed

Albany, IV., 28; proceedings of the, upon

the Snheneotady deserters, 102.

mayor's,

;Jo

i

of,

tended, Vlli., 167; powers of the, 446. martial,

IS

try

reasons

;

i ,

in » lull

forty

f

empowered

117;

71.,

limi

several, 389

IV., 287, 428, 548,

Andros,

;

enumeration of the

limitation to the erection of, 687, 820,

;

V.,

131

;

723; enumeration

III.,

by

established of,

sir

E.

in 1696, IV., 186;

cannot he established by the king on his sole authority,

515

;

report

on the proceedings

managed, 830;

for the

trial

of

of,

827

;

strangely

small causes,

commended to be established, V., 132

;

ter ordered to transmit a report on, 283

;

chief justice

Mompesson's report on the common law, 409

new ones erected attempt made to VII., 462;

480

;

re-

governor Hun-

establish

them by

no

;

in governor Burnet's time, 778

;

an

act of assembly,

what laws regulate the proceedings

of,

necessity of admitting the evidence of Indians

668 chief justice Hale's description of the English county courts, applied to, 697 state of, rein, 663,

;

;

;

York, VI.,

John Cham-

the samo as the king's

ported to the earl of Halifax, 760; retrospect of the history of appeals from, 762

;

closed in consequence

of the passage of the stamp act, 802, 806.

;;

GENERAL INDEX.

168 Courts

— continued.

[Cou-

of a remonstrance

Pennsylvania, colonel Quary's report on the, IV. > 1045.

churchwarden, 340, 424; his father and brothers conveyed to New Netherland free of expense, 343 at the Man-

in Virginia, 1719, V., 609.

hattans, 353, 356

sis

Massachusetts, closed, VIII., 567.

Courteen, Mendert, under sentence of death, IV., 55

the Hague, 399

(Cortemansche),

sent

captain,

to

and

;

convey immigrants

tioned, 83.

Courtemanche

recall

New

turns to

others, enter into a contract to

New

to

Netherland, 379, 380

Netherland, 420, 447, 448

421, 441, 499, 503

Otawawa, 894; in the attack at Cascobay, IX., 472; sent to the Hurons and western Indians, 496; pro-

Gerrit Wolphertsen,

ceeds to Michilimakinac, 516, 712, 713; on an expe-

leave guns for the militia in the hands

at

Mohawks,

the wounded, 561

mands

550, 557, 558

protects

;

sent to the Illinois, 569

;

at the river St.

Lookermans,

tia

Iroquois, 603; subject to the orders of the commandant of Michilimakinac, 625 recommended for a company, 714 sent to invite the western nations to send deputies to Quebec, 722; envoy to Boston,

621

brother of

and brother-in-law of Govert

on public

affairs

refuses

438

of,

;

to

ex-

from, 445, 416

;

have been given

449

to Indians,

;

director Stuyve-

guns brought over by, 455

;

director Stuyvesant charged with cruel behavior to-

wards,

;

signs the petition urging director

151;

II.,

Stuyvesant to surrender to the English, 250.

Couwenhoven, John Van, at the siege of fort

re-

mentioned,

;

director Stuyvesant

;

sant sells to Indians

;

Courtemanche, M. de,

;

particulars of, 431

;

at

;

;

complains that the guns he had brought for the mili-

Joseph and defeats a party of

779.

432

of a letter

tract

com-

;

417

petitions the states general,

;

coureurs du bois from the western country, IV., 782

dition against the

;

;

men-

;

delivered by, 331

William Henry, X.,

cil,

679, 684

77

III.,

member

;

;

member of

Leisler's

coun-

of the court of exchequer, 683.

commands a party of Indians at Ticonderoga, 811

Couwenhoven, Mr., II., 152. (See Gcrritsen ; Wolfersen.) sent with a detachment to the neighborhood of fort Couwenhoven, Pieter. (See Wolfersen.) Edward, 848 his report, 849 sent to the island of Covenants for the palatines' residence and employment in ;

;

;

Orleans, 994, 1018

retires before the English, 995,

;

1019.

New

(See Croissille.)

Croisille de.

memoir

land,

posed

of, II.,

to a peace,

opinions

;

of,

340

336 ;

;

reports Charles

pays a

visit to

Mr.

II.

indis-

Coventry, [Gilbert, 4th] earl

Van Gogh,

357; sets out for Oxford, 360.

cil,

565, 733;

Coventry,

sir

III., vii,

III., 31, 33,

249, 253, 413,

III.,

75, 130, 178,

160, 161

Cousseau, Miss,

III.,

Coustrier, Isaacq,

II.,

Henry,

130.

Coutey, Jacob,

II.,

II.,

Coutrie, Daniel de

Cowbay (Long

Cow

752.

III.,

an Indi-

Hudson's bay, 268, 304,

visits

of Newcastle, V., 710

;

Indians taken from, sent

Indies, 711.

I.,

140, 191, 192, 213;

Elbert Elbertzen, marries the

signs a petition, 417;

widow

of,

432.

Couwenhoven (Wolfersen, Van Kouwenhoven),

Jacob, signs

the certificate of election of the eight men, ;

state,

;

66

;

secre-

knighted,

state, 177.

II.,

145.

902.

IV., 915, 916.

Robert Carr applies for a tract of land in Rhode III.,

109.

203; thrive in

New

New

New

Netherland, 362

Netherland, 371

Netherland, 382, 383 II.,

210;

I.,

192,

a delegate to Holland from the people of

New

Netherland, 258, 261, 270, 318, 319, 397, 476

;

analy-

768

;

at fort

662.

in

New

Netherland,

I.,

Netherland, 277; need not be

;

;

;

furnished to farmers in

not to be exported from

number

of,

New

on the Delaware In

New England, 433; scarce in New Netherland,

purchased in

seized by the English, 438

[Couwenhoven,] Gerrit Wolphertse van, one of the eight

men,

to, 65,

of York, 103, 106, 114

Cowneck, Mr. Nicoll resides at, III., Cows, the sale of English, forbidden

1663,

Coutzer (Bautzer), George;, IV., 937.

193

sir

sent to

Couturier, M., brings letters to governor Burnet from the

West

564; secretary of

II.,

Mr. Maverick writes

;

duke

Island, called,

133, 134, 153; mentioned, 157;

784.

to the

of,

229,257.

one of the council of

island),

III., 19,

Cowessit,

an trader, IX., 214;

Duke

of the privy coun-

boys, the Westchester loyalists called, VII., 402.

Cowes, III,, 75.

Cousture, M., sent to Albany with letters from governor Tracy,

;

Cowen, Moses, VII.,

191.

Honde,

member

Coward, Hugh, IV., 1144.

250.

III., 71.

Coutakilmy, his death condoled, IX., 675. Couterier, David,

48

tary to the

179.

of,

William, knight, one of the council of trade,

Courval, Miss de, resembles Louis XV., IX., 1028. II.,

out a patent of in-

V., 539.

Coventry, Henry, memoir

1000.

Cousseau, Jacques,

make

ginia, III., 4.

Courval, captain, his services at the siege of Quebec, X.,

Cousturier..

V., 121.

of,

corporation for the colony of the north part of Vir

Courtin, Antoiue, French ambassador extraordinary to Eng-

356

York, drafts

Coventrie, sir Thomas, ordered to

Courtemanche,

;

Duquesne, X., 300.

(See Cattle.)

Cox, George, junior, IV., 937, 1008. Cox, Samuel, V., 420. Cox, Richard, one of the ablest statesmen Ireland ever pro-

duced, VIII., 803.

Cox, Thomas,

III.,

652; conveys lands in

Eugenius Cameron, V., 758.

New

Jersey to sir

-

GENERAL [NDEX.

Cm

Hi't

I

Cramprt

Oox, William, in 426, 602; drowned, 617. Coxboro, Oneidn oounty, N in ^ork, \

Mr

b,

unba

,

idor from the



mperor

to th

.

[

i

Coxe,

III., 6 i2;

Daniel,

838

Lntereal

bia

Belli

proprietor and

;

,,i

i.,,

John Tabor Kempe m Coxe, Daniel, |unior, recommended oila of New York and New J< his removal

tiona to, 966;

[hid ;;.,:,

for

a

biographloal

noisy fool, 401

of the evil example of, 481

Ji

Cranill, Robert, IT., 936, L007. :,

f,

104;

the

i

420;

N.w

508;

aoommon

tlu>

New Jersey

521

Coxe, Daniel, VI., 345

;

Cratchrode,

,

Crato, Jan,

men

for the of,

Canada expedition

260;

IV., 1094.

75, 103, 189.

II.,

Thomas, major Andros marries a daughter

sir

Craven,

William, major Andros marries a sister of

sir

Craven, William, lord,

741.

of,

member

of the privy council,

one of the proprietors of Carolina, 532. Crawford, James, IV., 929, 932. Crawford, Mr., Pontiac requests that he

Coyman, Balthy Jan, Graacke bay,

II.,

Craay, Tennis,

I.,

Indians, 860

;

Crahh, Theodore, X., 883.

favor

;

ploy, 865.

463.

II.,

104.

,

III.,

of,

863

sir

William Johnson promises

464

;

Cregier.

Crego, Richard, deceased, V., 419.

X., 59:2.

empowered

Crego, Sarah,

Craggs, James, secretary of state,

Crego, Thomas, X., 593.

William Burnett

to

III.,

is

;

letters of the

notifies the

;

be governor of

appointment

New

an order to prevent the dissolution of the

assembly signified council, 539;

cation

537;

to,

frustrates the

New York,

for presents

578

;

for the

member

York, 536

;

New York

of the privy

plan of calling a

new

governor Burnet's appliIndians transmitted

to,

VI., 157.

Andrew, VII., 983. I.,

VIII.,

to sell real estate, V., 419.

Cremille, Louis Hyacinthe Bayerode de, adjoined minister of war, X.,

286

;

S61

vii,

;

inspector-general of infantry,

narrative of the battle of Ticonderoga sent to,

762, 766

;

biographical notice

of,

768

;

M. de Mont-

calm reports the condition of things in Canada to, 855 news of the defeat of major Grant near fort Du;

quesne sent

to,

887, 901

;

events in Canada reported

to, 956, 958, 968.

Cremon, captain de, wounded, X., 431.

Craig, reverend Mr., VII., 496.

Crain, Louis,

em-

(See Crygicr.)

Crafton, ensign George, killed at Ticonderoga, X., 730.

lords of trade to, V., 535

of,

to

III., 75.

Craf,

assembly in

well

serves in Delaware, 733.

Cray, Tennis,

271.

Craence, sergeant, IV., 946. ,

;

the Indians renew their application in

Crawford, colonel William, biographical notice

506.

1.,

Craoy, Emanuel, X., 593.

Cradock,

be appointed

acquainted with the manners and customs of the

45.

II.,

may

assistant-commissary at Detroit, VII., 858, 859

437.

Crahbe, Jacob,

Cramahe

II.,

166, 177, 229, 230, 245, 257, 360, 376, 388, 427;

III.,

543.

Craig,

,

741.

II.,

Craven, [William.'lst] earl

of governor Andros' council, III.,

of,

741.

II.,

VII., 926.

Coyler, Caspar, VI., 392.

of

;

ac-

with

to be supplied

Cox's manor (New York), VII., 926.

Cracos,

261

'J-'.-,

Crauford, P., IV., 1135.

Craven,

member

v.,

ongress at Bo-'

Cranwell, Robert, IV., 389.

the hearing of his

petition of the inhabitants of, VI., 391.

Coxhill, John,

New London,

at

fusees, ibid.

Coxe, Rebeooa, VII., 926. Coxe, William, VII., 926.

Coxhaukee,

1116.

'

oepted on application

chairman of the board of refugees,

John Tabor Kempe,

the congress

the offer to raise

VII., 926. Cox.-, Grace, wite of

ol

in poll

rnmenl of Rhode Island, 600;

allowance for

the sheriff ol Burlington favors his election, 767.

;

I

men

ipe
.n id, kit

Imerlca,

III

,

273.

Day, comet, attacks the government of England from the pulpit ot one of the

London churches,

Dayton (Deayton), lieutenant of provincials, Dayton, major-general 682

;

Elias,

I.,

579.

killed. VII., 562.

biographical notice

of, VIII.,

mentioned, S00.

Deacon, George, member of the council of 335, 338, 521.

New

Jersey, V.,

;

;

GENERAL INDEX.

180 Deal (England),

839, V., 739.

III.,

[Di

Debtors, an act passed to prevent frauds in, VIII., 356.

Dean, Mr., recommended to congress, VIII., 627. Deane, captain, in the navy on lake Ontario, VII. 123.

Decanisora.

Deane, Thomas,

Decariaderoga, Indian

III.,

Dease, John, assists at an Indian conference held at Johns-

town, VIII., 362, 496, 497, 499

;

at Staten island, 6S3.

Deat, reverend Antoine, biographical notice

Deaths,

among the

of, IX.,

1021.

on the Delaware,

early settlers

Canada in 1679, IX., 143. D'Eau (Dau, Deaux, d'O), chevalier, seized

II.,

IX., 470

855

New

to

instructions to,

;

York,

III.,

733

III., ;

returns to Prance,

whilst a prisoner, IV., 42; mentioned, 66; Indian

name

121

of,

125

to, 124,

his treatment

;

hy the Indians

referred

escapes to Canada, 214, IX., 533, 543

;

;

sent hy count Frontenac on an embassy to Onondaga,

469

efforts

;

made

to gain intelligence of,

501

482

Mr.

;

De

,

Decarry, wounded, X., 1086. Dechambeau, the English land at, X., 1002, 1033.

Decker, Brour, IV., 1010. Decker, Cornelius, lieutenant of a troop of horse, IV., 810. Decker, Jacob, ensign of militia, IV., 810. Decker, Johan de, sent to Virginia to reclaim a ship and slaves captured

privateer,

II.,

mentioned,

;

St.,

IX., 518.

Declaration, of vice-director

Dyck

Van

Dinclage and

against director Stuyvesant,

I.,

Van Wap-

fiscal

441; of

panghzewan, an Indian sachem, respecting governor

Utrecht, 480, 481

;

at Cadiz,

New

of

appointed auctioneer to the Dutch

647; order of

Bayard issues commands to, colonel Bayard to, 658 and others com;

affairs at

Albany, 702, 703

affidavit before, against

;

;

Robert Liv-

ingston, 747; one of Leisler's council, 751.

De Bruyn, Jo'n Henry, major

why

I.,

429

New

erland for the payment of

province of

New

the, II., 251 York, in 1700, IV., 829

in 1704, 1129

;

preferential,

Nethof

;

;

pro-

;

the

in 1702,

by the law of Engpayment of the

land, V., 3; an act passed for the public, 378, 379

;

44

;

in support of the

river, 80;

of

tans,

103,

104,

governor Hunter urges the confir-

mation thereof, 380 lord Cornbury's objections to the act for paying the public, 398 acts for paying the public, approved, 412, 447, 470 an act passed ;

;

;

105;

them

the states general, in favor of the

act passed in

report of the board of trade

act for paying the public, 522; an

New York

in relation to

904; laws for the collection

Massachusetts, VIII., 652.

of,

ManhatJohn Underbill, to re-

title

of the

of

;

West

company to -New Netherland, 228; of Aegidius Luyck and others, that there was not powder enough defend fort Amsterdam, 469 of Messrs. Van Ruyven and Bayard, respecting the efforts made by ;

England, 473

of

;

New

sundry persons, respecting the John Scott on Long island,

violent conduct of captain

480

;

of

Herman Martens van der Bosch and Evert

Williamson Munnick, respecting the circumstances

New

attending the surrender of the

West India company,

Netherland, 508

;

of

in favor of the proprietors

commanders of 558 sundry New England vessels captured and brought into New Orange, 715 showing the illegality, &c, of the of Rensselaerswyck,

of

;

the

;

patent of Maryland,

23; of deputies from the

III.,

Weexe, about the Indians

to prevent the confirmation of the last act for

on the New York

the Dela-

South river

to the

India

to

made

;

;

;

title to

at the

move

showing forth the reasons which impel him

towns on Long island, 91

;

in

paying the public, 516

to

captain

of

remainder of the, 499 caveat entered England agaiust the confirmation of that act, 503 governor Hunter's remarks on that act, 504 efforts

for paying the

Dutch

sundry persons

as to attempts to induce

director Stuyvesant to obtain provisions from

of militia, IV., 809.

ordered to be collected,

vision in the articles of capitulation of

ware

nounce director Stuyvesant's government, 151

III., 601

attends, 617; colonel

missioned to superintend

II.,

26; of Adrian Janssen, 28; before the Dutch consul

(See d'Iberville.)

to attend at the proclaiming of their majesties,

mentioned, 727

Sachem

of the Manhattans," 597, 599; of Jan Gaillardo,

towns on Long island, 675. De Bruyn (D. Broun, Debrowne), captain John, summoned

for,

222

II.,

187, 189.

;

De Boyteulx, Gabriel, III., 749. De Bruyn, Francis II., 375, 463, 577; schepen

;

480,

I.,

the South river to Peter Stuyvesant, "Chief

killed, X., 1089.

Dehoraveille, M., IV., 116.

1052

by a

253, 453, 467.

Deckere, Abraham,

Printz wishing to buy his lands, 596 of Amattehooren and other Indians, of the cession of lands on

an Indian interpreter, VII., 752.

Dehonne, captain,

Debts, public,

head of the Mo-

titular

;

;

(See Niverville.)

Blois,

VIII.,

;

of a soldier taken with, 582.

Debeline.

Chew,

perfidy

;

New York, 515 his restoration demanded, Nelson may he exchanged for, 531 name

at

;

village, IV., 655, 802.

of Mr. Joseph

hawks, 500.

sent to Boston, 499,

Iroquois burn his interpreter and two canoemen,

;

501, 502

525

;

Mohawk

a

name

derivation, ibid.

its

Decarihoga, his address to governor Tryon, VIII., 304;

Declarain, of the Iroquois towards, 495

;

,

Onondague

at

732, IV., 214,

suspected of having corresponded with Canada

;

501

chief of Canajoharie, 478 69;

in

and sent prisoner

(See Dekanissore.)

Decanohoge (Dekanoge),

95, 107, 110.

of the general court of

;

Massachusetts against the king's commissioners, 95

ordered published, 96; reply to the, ibid; of William

governor Lovelace, that

if

seizing a vessel, 168

a minister shall

;

of

come from

Holland, he shall have a proper salary, 189

;

of the

imprisonment

freeholders of Suffolk county (Long island), 577; of

suspended in

the inhabitants referred to, 639

and ;

soldiers of

of the lords

Now York

in 1689,

and commons assembled

;

;

GENERAL INDEX.

I),.ll

I

I

continmd.

Derivation in

,;

L689

Clinton

ioi

upon Mi. Boi

601

Idavit, VI.,

i

soldiers In Shirley's regiment, about the \ il

,

Sfork,

\

126;

,

in

,

.

1

1

1

684

,

addressed

In

1)..

'

mitti

I.



in-i-

to

.1

1".

ll l.,

i

the

rem

i

name

thi

Canadians, X Declaratory

oi

;

betwi en

Dub

bj

I

oopy thereof tran

:

i

ned bj Philip

lig

,

pted

Ind

of

296

470, ax

and

h

of the

I

em, IV., 898.

a

aoe to the

]

.

I

i

,

I

V

.

.

(Se-

aot.

Collier, Mr.

(See Calliirts.) to

d

oonnoitre the works

Oswego, X., 441, 472

a1

IV., 910.

ief,

Decombles (Deoombe

;

re-

at

-

killed,

with a mes-

sage to

442, 455, 459, 461, 465, 468, 473, 476, 478,

632,916,918; name of the Indian who

660;

killed,

I).-

w

117; de-

Albany,

to

New fork, 429 commission as lieutenof

q1

governor Clinton retains the

;

salarj

;

twi

bi

.'

n

\ oi k

J

Canada expedition,

Peter Warren,

from, 431, 465

N

of

ion rs to All

li the boundary

tions

ernor

governor Clinton

at

oommis

to land

o

;o;

the

sir

-

emp

public

om

;

a

opposed

692;

accompany

to

;

rom

the oounoil, 111, 176

brother-in-law of

416;

i

nor Clinton

-

him from

428

remcn

bis

;

i

i

mploj until

conn

th"

of,

!;

;

I

845; reports the result of Indians, 850, and

V17

further

;

representations against, 464; the archbishop of Can-

oi



oon n

'

Indian traders

the

with the

b

with the

attends the colon!

;

B58

to,

853;

,

oi

obtains aid for

;

Virginia

Mr. Colden complains

of, terbury a friend of, 165; 46S; connected by marriage with the Colden family,

9] 1,936;

4G9; abuses governor Clinton's confidence, 470, 472, 474, 536, 665

generally feared, 473, 475

;

;

about to be 7.":

suspended from being lieutenant-governor, 476, his appointment as lieutenant-governor "the faction," 523, 530, 69S governor Clinton alters tire head of " the his resolution of suspending, 52S faction," 551, 097; correspondence between captain 1

;

lay- before

tl

dition oi the frontiers of

report

proceedin

his

;

Roddam

and, 572, 573

his majesty's ship

ernor Clinton's

;

commits

Greyhound,

a

for

man belonging

murder, 574; gov-

on such

observations

575; captain Roddam, R. N., complains requires

him

to release his

proceeding, of,

mission

gnnner's-mate, 585; gov-

calls for the

opinion of the law

to,

601

revocation of the com-

granted

lieutenant-governor

of

and

584,

ernor Clinton complains of Mr. Horsmanden

governor Clinton

to

officers of the

crown

612;

to,

in the case,

s

from

him

Shirley determines

ir

i

;

New

suggests measures of d

to

assembly, 946; communicates the royal instructions regarding the revenue to the assembly, call the

his

948;

appointment

justice during

as chiei

behavior submitted for the opinion of the law

on

of the crown, 951; waits

whose

defeat he

operations

990

reports,

against the

suggests a plan of

;

report of the

French, 991;

George transmitted

battle of lake

to,

32

bis position as chief justice, VII.,

1003 ;

resumes

;

instructed to

sundry

co6perate in training a law for the vacating of

extravagant giants

government from

in sir

good

officers

Braddock, 989,

g.-noral

New York,

7s

;

receives the

Charles Hardy, 224

an act of

;

ibid; governor Clinton yielded to the usurpations of

parliament prohibiting the exportation of grain trans-

one of a com-

milted to, 271; reports a riot arising out of the disputed boundary between New York and Massi the fall of fort William

the assembly, by the advice mittee of the council to

of,

616;

whom

letters

were referred

on the defenseless state of the frontiers, 648; one of the committee of ways and means for the Canada expedition, 652

;

forms

a joint

committee of the council

and assembly and draws up the representations of the latter

body, 666;

power

of the

bly, erts

hands of the assem679; attends the governor to Albany, 687; exhis influence against the government, 701 the

Bedford not favorable to, 727; absents himfrom the council, 752 the archbishop of Canteroi

bury writes

;

777; report of the law officers of the

to,

crown on the commission granted during good behavior to, 792 sworn in as lieutenant-governor of ;

New York,

803

;

announces the commencement of

his administration to the lords of trade, ibid

;

sug-

274; communicates bis views on

th

the lords of trade

New

to,

334; sends a return of iron manufactured

333*;

Netherland,

province of

into the

;

duke self

endeavors to throw the executive

government

lli-nrv,

of

i

letter of

New York, 335;

in

the

informs the lords of

the destruction of Q

troubled with that

New York

tion

against

has voted

Crown

of trade of the

informs secretary Pitt

asthma, 343;

fall

Point,

force

a

343;

I

advises the lords

of fort Duquesne, 352

the province he reimbursed th

:

asks that irred for

censured for assenting to an act for quit rents, without a suspending clause,

the war, 353; coll, •ctin,'

354

;

359

;

ordered to coBperate in reestablishing Oswego, justifies

himself for having assented to the quit

;; ; ;;

; ;;

GENERAL INDEX.

181

— continued.

De Lancey, James

rent act, 369

ment and

De Lancey, Stephen,

asks to be relieved from the govern-

;

bench, 370

to return to the

movements

lords of trade of the

of the army, 395

New

York, 420

426

vindicates the propriety of justices' courts, 427

;

dead, 441, 447 ;

468

;

son marries

;

declines

incorporating the

despatches

Mohawks complain

den, VII.,

of the Kayaderosseras patent, to,

671; added a fourth justice to the supreme court, cajoled governor Clinton, 705

;

De Lancey, Stephen, grandson

the

death, 587;

his

rians apply for a charter to, 847

the presbyte-

;

attacked in the

;

brother-in-law

;

De Lancey,

Delano, M., an

De Lanoy

notice

council, VIII., 109

called to

;

New

;

Bayard,

mayor

of

744, 746,

(son of Peter), captain of the Westchester

biographical notice

De Lancey, John, member

754

of, ibid.

592,

absconds, 513

reported to the secretary of state,

and

514,

;

to the

471

stabs doctor

;

board of trade, 516; distinguishes

himself in opposing the government, 571

up the mayor

that the faction will set ;

insults

threatens

;

a government of their own, of

New

brother prevents the prosecution

York, 692 of,

693

;

;

his

ordered

prosecuted, 694; evidence taken before the council in the ease of, 695, 697 ;

takes the

VII., 343

529;

;

Mr. Smith

;

command

of the

offers to prosecute,

New York

appointed receiver-general of

member

of the council,

eoloiul of militia, 377;

763, VIII., 304,

colonel

disloyalty in a litter to, 590; loyalist brigade,

regiments,

New

York, 685;

Morris accused of

endeavors to raise a

687; biographical notice

of,

788; his

617; collector of

603

;

imprisoned, 767, 811

;

letter of, referred to,

213

;

his letter relative to gover-

nor Fletcher's conduct, 221, 224

;

Mr. Penn lays before

the board of trade, a letter from, 246.

De

la Plaine, Nicholas, II., 249, III., 76.

Delaporte, M., IX., 1071.

Dela Tour.

De

(See Tour.)

Lavall, Margriet,

Delavall,

II.,

608.

Thomas, one of the deputies sent

tor Stuyvesant,

II.,

to

411; appropriates

ibid, III

,

206

;

591; boat

II.,

Oliver, junior, major in the seventeenth light ;

colonel

o

the seventeenth

Delancey, Peter, notice VIII., 718;

602; his servant absconds,

608

;

owned (New York), 637; order town of Harlem

property at fort Orange confiscated, ibid

a house in the Sheep-walk

of, VI.,

general Parsons, 735 of, 804.

469

;

marries Elizabeth Colden,

;

mercy of brigadier-

Ralph Izard marries a daughter

;

to appraise the property of, 638; the

meadow belonging to,

644

to, ;

a

643

com-

missioner appointed to settle the estate at Willemstadt of,

commissioner to the Esopus, Dutch plunder the house of, 200,

672, 676, 687; sent

III.,

his buildings at the

direc-

himself the

603; allowed to remove his daughter to Seakonk,

orders respecting property belonging

light dragoons, 795.

to

disposition of his property at Harlem, of, sold,

applies for a grant of a

dragoons, VIII., 295

summon

proceeds of the excise, 578; property of, attached,

X.,827; reported

De Lancey,

620

Leisler,

660, 662, 703, 733, 750, 751,

arrested, 759, 792, 794

;

captain

advises

;

New York, 645, 675, 740, 741, 742, 743, 747; member of lieutenant-governor Leis-

services approved by the king, 790; at fort Craven, killed, 848.

302

and acquitted, 789 governor Fletcher threatens any man that would vote for, IV., 127, 143, 178; under bonds not to leave New York, 212, 217;

Colhoun and

of,

York,

one of the com-

to shoot

(Lanc6), Oliver, complaints against, VI., 413, 414;

riotous conduct

;

613,

597,

93; bookkeeper,

New

York, 307

tried

New

of the general committee of

York, VIII., 601.

De Lancey

760

New

III.,

port of

ler's council, 636, 657,

horse, 718

587,

II.,

York, 596, 598, 608, 609, 649; protects colo-

nel

the

148.

De Lancey, James

681

of lieutenant-governor Col-

of the

mittee of safety,

a seat in the council,

refuses

;

ibid

of,

Ann Van

Chauvigny

on board La Deesse, X., 49.

officer

collector

about to leave

a daughter of, 685.

James, son of the lieutenant-govannounces the surrender of Niagara, VII.,

biographical

;

la

VIII., 480.

of,

(Delancie), Pieter,

to the

590

VIII.,

John Watts

marries

;

;

his

703; appointed clerk of Albany, ibid;

biographical notice

captain

ernor,

402

John Watts,

of

Thomas Jones marries

590

;

D'Lancy, Hugh, X., 593.

review of the military operations in North America, 909

of, VIII.,

advances money to M. de

;

856

of Canada, IX., 1030.

528

of,

lutheran church, 585

received after

for,

Cortlant, 788

as-

seat, ibid

of,

Miss Colden, VI., 469;

marries a daughter

;

Daniel Horsmanden one of the party

but takes the oaths and his

;

governor Montgomerie's representation

Cadwallader Colden succeeds, 444, commissioned judges during good behavior,

461

700

;

sembly, 769

the taking of Quebec,

celebrates

;

advised

;

York, 1184

Burnet questions his qualification as member of

conduct approved,

requested not to detain the mail packets at

;

New

purchases cocoa from privateers. V., 230, 233; recommended for a seat in the council, 459 governor

;

his

Frenchman of New York,

that the French are about to attack

;

;

a

;

signs a petition to king William, IV., 934

;

and death of attorney-general Kemp, 399 announces the reduction of Niagara, 401 congratulates the lords of trade on the surrender of Quebec, 405

749

III.,

concerned in the Madagascar trade, IV., 532, 542 a merchant of New York, 624, 849, 1135, V. 332;

advises the

;

reports the fall of Ticonderoga

419

[Del-

149, 150;

tln>

202; auditor of the duke of York, 206, 226; don, 228, 229, 231, 236, 247 fore the council, 301

;

;

in

Lon-

brings Jacob Milborne be-

executor to Mr. Swinton, 426.

Delaware George, an Indian, VII., 286.

;;;

; ;

— Del]

GENERAL INDKX.

Delaware (He •red,

la

i

W'a.T, Dell.-u arr, IVInwatl, Q

tppoqutminy

;

the South river called by -'.'i'

of,

599; foros 64



English, 289

« •

it

to

authorized for

an

206;

tli.'

ui'w oolonie

(iii,

voted

to

appropriation

colonists

resolutions of the

to,

8, n», 12, 48, 66, 67, 68,

206; memoir thereupon, at,

r ,:»,

Amsterdam

of

and

tO

for,

214

663

242, 244, 246, 247, 258, 259, 354, 604, 615,

v ioo- director Alrichs receives deeds for land

;

the east and west sides

of,

extent of, 11;

7;

mouth

director Alrichs suggests a settlement at the ;

68

extent of the colonie on, 18, 71

clergyman expected

arrives at, 20; a

mittee appointed to colonie on, 21

22

ship Meulen

;

com-

ibid; a

at,

inquire into the affairs of the

further aid granted to the colonie on,

;

city of

bank

damage

considerable sickness

;

to the crops at, 50

;

at, 50,

69; serious

executions to be issued

with the knowledge of the director, 62; Mary-

of,

of sending

fugitives

from,

241

Utie visits, 73, 86

common

;

Dutch

of the

surrender

to,

title

81

of,

80

;

Amsterdam

council at

resolves to surrender the colonie on, 78

;

vindication

Maryland demands the

not mentioned in lord Baltimore's

;

patent, 82; director Stuyvesant expresses his deter-

mination to maintain the right of the Dutch called of old, Nassau river, 86

peake from, 88

claimed by

;

sir

;

to,

83

route to the Chesa-

Edward

Ployten, 92

223;

fort

;

il

213,

to,

••

slaves required

fifty

of,

212;

oouni

in thi

conveyed

Nassau on

to the

I

duke

the

;

the land between the

all

Amsterdam voted

city of

to

burghers

bounds of New

Netherland extend to the south

609

called the

South

river,

615

commander

heretofore

;

at,

ibid

70

for,

Needham

captain

;

articles of capitulation of, 71

;

Robert Carr makes a grant of land and erects

manor

74

of,

the Swedes propose to

;

20; reduced by the English, 68, 345;

lord Baltimore anxious

;

72; Indians kill several christians

on,

sir

the people of

New Haven excluded from the,

at,

82

Robert Carr cannot be persuaded to leave, 83

to be terett,

granted to lord Berkeley,

and

others, 105, 114

sir

;

j

George Car-

sir

Robert Carr loses his

possessions on the, 109; lord Baltimore has no right to,

113; lands of the Dutch

officers at,

115; Maryland renews her claim

confiscated,

344, 345;

to, 186,

bounds New Jersey, 223 sir John the duke of York, 237, 239

regulations for trade at, 217

claimed for

;

;

;

;

the Dutch in, its name from the English, 93 long before lord Delaware came to Virginia, ibid the obtains

common

the

;

the entire

a grant of

65

claimed to be a part of Maryland, 67, 70; colonel

iMd

to, ibid,

;

on the

of the colonie on, 354; the south

64;

to,

]

trad.- at,

tl,e

aid asked to protect the, 244

;

freedom of the

a

one hundred people

r,

rt

Connecticut and, 296; the English invade, 336; the

sir

requested to send back

land

expense

to,

Amsterdam, 220, 230

York obtains

of

'J

flu •

I

others to be admitted to a share

of the colonie on, 215

settle on, III.,

on, 48, 101

sail

send aegrbei ;

ai

^,

resolve to Bend merohandJ

return of loans effected on account of the colonie

;

at,

of,

further reports from the colonie on, 13, 18, 49,

ibid ;

on

vice-

condition

;

210; annual value.,!'

about to

109, 112, 114, 117, 119, 124, 178, 183, 186, 200, 202, ,

209

in 1683,

11

200;

on,

lerdam chamber on

oolonie at,

.

Am

8to., to,

CO, 61, 75, 76, 86, 96, 97, 98, 100, 101, 108, 106, 108,

204, 240, 241

the whole of, in-

202

198,

the,

OB tb* settlement and progress

Idlers and paper*

•1;

of the colonic on the, 4,

oompanj

India

I

,

596,

Ibid, II., 17, 22, 56,

Bend

We

be printed, 197; the

description

;

estimated expense of a oolonie cm, 643; loans

1

complain

Qetti]

rfption of tie

•inert,,,

tl

Dutch obtain aoonveyanoeof leads On, neosssuy to garrison fort Caeimir'on

the

;

1 1

In the

Van

186; Cornells

1662, for,

Godyt tad Blommaeri

27; patent to Messrs.

,

for a oolonie on, 48

L85

King's opinion touching the colony on the, 247

;

ernor Andros

254; bounds

visits,

gov-

;

New York on

the

;

Mr. Penn bounded by the shores

286

Maryland have nothing to do except with the Dutch resident at, 94; arguments against the claim of Maryland to, 96; further appropriations

west, 260

voted for the colonie on, 100, 164, 165, 176, 206;

whale stranded in, 307 lord Baltimore requests to be heard before the council on his claims to, 339 account

authorities of

controversy with lord

Baltimore

respecting,

116;

West India company forts erected by the

captain Neale protests against the

occupying,

for illegally

Dutch at,

137

at,

117

;

Robert Coghwel notified not to

;

unless under the Dutch, 144

missioners

of the

colonie

;

165

on,

167;

expense

to,

169

;

scriptions to the

stock

at, of,

170

;

176

government 183

;

common

;

free of

proposals for sub-

202; Mennonists

return of monthly payments for the

179 names of the colonists going to, and disbursements for the years 1659 to

of,

receipts

colonie

171; further privileges

granted to the colonie on, 173,175 to,

the

private persons to be allowed to

take stock in the colonie

going

;

Amsterdam resolve to maintain the emigrants recommended to be sent

council of of,

settle

report of the com-

24

;

;

duke of York on, 290; no patents

he applies to the sessions

of,

;

for a grant of his pos-

for land on, 303;

a

;

;

of the

first

settling on,

342

Swedish minister on, 343 against Maryland, 345

;

;

sir

;

reverend Mr. Lokenius, preparations to defend

it

Robert Carr plunders the

Dutch at, 346 New Jersey line ought to be run from Hudson's river to the, 356; writ of quo warranto ;

ordered to be sued against the proprietor of the

colony on, 362, 363

;

the north bounds of Pennsyl-

vania proposed to be run from the

hanna

to,

394;

New York

loses,

falls of the

Susque-

415; not under

sir

Andros, 536, 537, 543; New York desires the annexation of the three lower counties on, 791; the E.

province of

New York extended

Pennsylvania west 836

;

of,

797;

lands granted to Mr.

originally to, 796

Mohawks Penn on,

at the

IV.,

head

108

;

of,

the

;

;

GENERAL INDEX.

186 Delaware

— continued. the Dutch settle the, 353

;

a pirate enters, 378

;

;

a Madagascar ship concealed in, 413

;

;

his ship into, 816

877

fortified,

from

vessels

New

;

New York

;

burns

Nova

Scotia to, 369

New York bounded

;

observations on Choueguen, 202

307

in condition,

;

fort,

expedition against 400, 403, 429, 458,

476, 481, 494, 529, 915. Delft,

in part by,

chamber of the West India company

6;

I.,

at,

Netherland, 466, 467; admiral Cornelius terred at,

modious, 604 one of the bounds of Pennsylvania, VI., 124; one of the boundaries of the province of

417.

De

New

Delinn, M., arrives in Canada from Louisiana, X., 37.

;

observations of lieutenant-governor

de Lancey on the boundary formed by, 838 the expense of removing the French encroachments have ;

on the colonies east

fallen

commissary

of, VII., 7;

reverend Israel

Delisle,

207

;

mence

at the

176

;

all

of,

head waters

com-

of, VII., 603.

adopts the Virginia resolutions, VIII.,

carried off

,

mortally wounded, X., 1086.

of,

;

De De

1'

of

New York

taken from

M., an officer at Michilimakinac, IX., 625.

Isle,

De

l'isle,

163; lieutenant-governor Clarke offers to

of,

Dell,

recommended

M.,

domine,

conveys pro-

to

be appointed commissary of

Delletto, Charl, IV., 934.

Dellius (Delliuse), reverend Godfrey, converts one Indian,

696

III.,

well disposed towards the French mission-

;

715

aries,

and

from New Netherland 314,

315

grants to

New

New

Netherland,

I.,

258;

to the states general resolved

;

apply for means to transport emiNetherland, 376; again bring

before the states general, 385

by the, 397; about

;

its affairs

further representation

to leave Holland,

398; some of

New Netherland, 420; to be chosen from private colonies in New Netherland, 499. De L6ry, baron, founded a settlement in Acadia, IX., 781. the, return to

Gaspard Chaussegros, chief engineer of Canada, colonel Johnson intercepts a letter from, VI., (Levis),

525, 526; subject of that letter, 541

;

his report

on

the fortifications of Quebec, IX., 872; builds a fort at locates fort Niagara at the

Niagara, 963, 976, 977; of the river, 964

tenac to France, 979

;

;

sends a plan of fort Fron-

estimates the cost of an estab-

lishment at La Galette, 1011, 1013

;

sent to Niagara,

flies

to

to,

found, 732

made

by lieutenant-governor Leisler to New Jersey and Long island, Boston, ibid the Indians thank governor

against, 753

fort, III., 74.

from father Milet

letter

;

Clinton succeeds, 187, 189.

Delegates sent to Holland from

(See Bdlius.)

732.

III.,

complaints

mouth

map

of Louisiana

his

Delisle, M., a contractor at Illinois, X., 249;

purchase his commission of governor, 164; George

De L6ry

map of

map

;

war, X., 392.

;

on,

103.

Lisle, John, naturalized, VII., 469.

93.

New York and New Jersey, VI., 96, 97, 110 a letter received in New York, addressed to, 114; asks for a return of stores at New York, 148 biographical

Delawarr

)

visions to the Ouyatanons, 407.

Delawarr, [John West, 7th] lord, appointed governor of

sketch

in-

that of, sent to the board of trade, 143.

trade with, prohibited, 668.

Delawarr, [Thomas West, 2d] lord, biographical notice II.,

by Indians, X.,

,

the best, VI., 122; a

;

Delaware, State

(See Lignery

Louisiana and Canada, V., 577

to the

a boundary with the Indians proposed to

;

three of the regicides arrested at,

Guillaume, governor Burnet refers to his

Lisle,

Swedish churches on the, 168 the Mohawks claim the head waters of, 576 > the grant to the duke of York extended to, 595, VIII., Acrelius,

265

II.,

Lignerie (Delignery, Desligneris).

Delisle,

De

New

Tromp

600, VI., 124, 508; the three lower counties on the,

;

gives

opinion on the order for the government of

its

granted to William Penn, V., 603; exceedingly com-

York, 508

up

puts fort Duquesne

;

commands an

396; destroys that

fort Bull,

illegal traders seized in

;

leads a party of Indians

;

John, 180; his services commended, 181; draws

961

French priva-

;

Bridgeman, 143

fort

into the English colonies, 144; builds a fort at St.

not

;

Andros, governor of the country from

sir E.

;

the,

;

DeLery (de Levis), Joseph Chaussegros, VII., 82; sent to Crown Point, X., 52 sent against the Mohawks, 129 ;

cruise as far as the capes of,

Jersey extends along, 1155

teers off the capes of, V., 61

the, 301

832

fortified,

Cornbury descends

draws a plan of

;

;

Frederick Philips orders

ought to be

;

lord

;

;

180; present at a con-

X.,

ignoramus, 963.

;

carry off a vessel from, 585

1148

;

Cape May in, 542 Pennsylvania on the and New Jersey on the east side of, 543 pirates

west,



new establishment of Abb6 Piquet, 203 death of, 496, 669; employed in fortifying Quebec, 655 a great the

;

pirates land at

of,

ference with the Iroquois, 187, 188

boundary of the grant to the duke of York, 382, Adolph Philips conveys goods from a 1122, 1165 pirate to, 390

complained

1104;

colony on, under an arbitrary quaker government,

300

[Del

moves

;

;

Sloughter for restoring,

sends to Boston

for,

772

771

;

Sloughter

governor

allowance

;

to, for instruct-

ing the Indians, IV., 26; the Jesuits of Canada write to,

47

;

letter of the

thanked

for his

ter of, to

reverend father Dablon

reverend father Milet

letter of the

kindness

to, 49,

to a certain priest, 60

governor Fletcher, 78, 92, 125

father Milet to,

to,

;

48

;

let-

letter of

interpreted to the five nations, 88

minister at Albany, 94, 248, IX., 680;

;

93, 95;

;

sends shirts

and stockings to father Milet, IV., 96 will send letters and information about father Milet to governor ;

Fletcher, 97

;

recommended

as a

fit

person to treat

with the Indians, 170; minister to the Indians, 175, 176

;

one of the board for Indian

280, 282, 294, 295, 337, Leisler, 219

;

351

;

affairs,

a bitter

177,

178,

opponent of

attends a meeting of the Indians at

Albany, 239, 248, 279, 281

;

appointed to treat with



;

Dl

GENERAL i\m:\

N

Dnlliu.s,

— mntmurd.

reverend Godfrey

Den made

the Indians, 240; extravagenl grants of land uiih

ni

tettei

Bellomont, 836; sen


to,

>

-

1

j

>

hi,

oapt

inge, r

X,

tin,

v

r

prlntai on boat

,

I ,

887

Quebec, IV., 848; bearer of a

from the

letter

earl of

tion

of,

nations, to

849;

aooused

.'H>2

defrauds the Mohawks, 363; teaches

;

De Meloiae, captain and adjutant, bravery

of tampering

with

the earl of Bellomont oomplainB very Btrongly

366

of,

DeMeloise (De Uelois), ohevaliei

6ve

the

691, B94;

104

;iu7,

379; extent of

to,

4GI!, :>0A, 780,

;

extravagant grant

to,

er

(Demyre),

,

De Meyer, Henry,

an address

369; the wife

to governor Fletcher, IV., 426; proof in

support of the deoeit need by, 462; suspected by the

have complained of the usage

490 ; a stone

of,

Amsterdam reported Bellomont

earl of

fort

recommended

for his

to

Nicolas,

of, distrusts

for,

brother-in-law

;

to the king, 178;

ill

governor Sloughter's council, threaten,

75

III.,

of,

soldi

signs a petition

;

major, 417; authorized to provide

materials for fortifying

be built

249, 700; the

II.,

Dutch

the

to

at the extremity of the extravagant grant to, 505

VIII.,

plunder the house

to

takes the oath of allegiance,

his lordship's accusations

the classis of

tanm nee),

i

749.

III.,

Dutch soldiers threaten

;

l"7-;,

of colonel Bayard, 519.

391, 398,

344, 345; prevails on the people of Albany to sign

Bellomont, 488;

X,

but does not account

the excise of Ulster county, IV., 418

De Meyer (De Mayer, Demyre),

against, 489

Loudon

at tori

collects,

VIII.,

earl of

of,

Ttoondsroga, X-,

al

169.

Demej

;

admission of count de Frontenao

tin-

826, V., 11, 22, 661, VI., B69,

de,

billed, 1089.

Demerd, oaptain, stationed

;

delivers a letter from the earl of Bellomont to count do

Frontenao,

;

wounded, 1089.

847; the Indians nnderthe direc-

pray and oheata them out of tloir Land, 364

1

1010.

to governor de Callieres, 844; fraudulent purchase of land by, 846, 846; report of bi

them

dead,

.

Bellomont

tions In Canada,

IX.,

In, I

nt

>hip,

g

1167

Intelli-

the peace, 339, 840, 402, 407, BOO, i\., 682

.•i



writes to the

188;

l

is?

New

York, 592 685

member

;

of

anti-leisleriana

;

744, 745; dead, 756.

De Meyer (D. Meijer), Nicholas, IV., 938, 941. De Meyer (Demeijer, Demyre), William, IV 7, 941, 1006. act of the legislature, 510, 529, 622, V., 7 the earl of De Mill, Peter, III., 745. Bellomont determined to vacate the extravagant grant De Milt (De Mill), Anthony, II., 249; schout ef New Orange, ;

deprived of his church and ministerial function by

,

|

;

'

1112; his grant vacated, 528, 714; goes

to, IV., 514,

to England, 533, 58L, 623, V., 9

mont's character

of, IV.,

;

533; embarks in

for England, 534; the reverend Mr. ibid, 581;

532, 575, 600, 719, 722; signs a petition, 743

the earl of Bello-

New

Vesey prays

examination of Indians in the case

an oath of allegiance,

Jersey

of,

takes

;

Andros"

opposes

75;

III.,

government, 223.

for,

Democracy, Connecticut

little more than a mere, VII., De Moine, captain, IX 489. De Moiis, Pierre de Gua, marquis, governor of Acadia,

539,

440.

,

.040

;

his departure regretted, 541

mont proposes

to distribute

;

the earl of Bello-

among

lands taken from, 553, 558;

the soldiers the

2,

the earl ol Bellomont

Canada,

lieutenant-general of

men to survey timber on the land of, 555 France, 702 Mohawks complain of, 566; seduces a French Demonstration (a), woman, 582; the earl of Bellomont desires the lords Great Duty

•employs

New

3; appointed viceroy to

303;

lieutenant-general of

;

;

the

minister of Albany, 743, 783 regrets the

grant to

to,

banishment

7S5

;

of,

;

a landgrave, 791

;

;

to

;

to,

;

the grant

to,

the Palatines might be

on the lands formerly granted

to,

553;

Wood to,

VI., 145; the earl of Bellomont bears testimony to

and merit, IX., 690; returns to New York, 692. Delmas, captain, recommended for the cross of St. Louis, X. 375. bis character

8

Loffre, M., X., 1063.

Demuth

(See Dailhbout.)

De Muy (De Mayes, Dumui), I

captain, IX., 521, 522; sent to watch the Iroquois, 622; serves in the expedition

against the Onondagas, 650

De Muy, lieutenant, detached commands a detachment ordered to remain

S7

mandant

;

dead, notice

;

Crown

to

sent to

;

at Detroit,

539;

at

X.,

34;

England, 51

52

;

at the lake of the

commandant

of, 670.

Point,

New

at fort St. Frederic,

return to Montreal, 59 tains,

Laprairie,

his Indians

two moun105

;

com-

the Flatheads negotiate

with, 540.

Denau (Daynaw, Denioes, de Noes), X., 749, 754, 795, 815, 816.

Denham, John,

Deloyal.

Deniau,

Delpriel, lieutenant, death of, X., 372, 399.

and

writes,

(Timoth), George, X., 8S1.

Delorme, captain, trades between France and Canada, IX., 306. (See Migutt.)

Johnson

M., reports a conversation with governor Bur-

net, VI., 569.

813; masts for

S25

creek (Washington county), included in the grant

De

De Museaux,

colonel Smith averse

to,

New

to

France, 781.

VI., 914.

London on the

be repealed, 1112; further reference to his

extravagant grant, V., 14, 15 settled

586; late

large pines

breaking the extravagant grants

the government cut on the grant

ought

of,

the bishop of

774

sent

New

of the Reasonableness, Usefulness

of Prayer, reverend Dr.

of trade to be informed of the knavery

IX.,

France, 266, 267;

,

III

,

captain, heads a sortie,

(See Nau.)

33, 36.

a voyageur arrested for trading to Oswego,

IX., 1049.

GENERAL INDEX.

188 Denis, Jean, a settler at Pentagonet, IX., 933. Denis, [Nicolas],

member

tention ta support the five nations, 525;

of the council of Canada, IX., 36;

writes a history of Acadia, 380

expels the English

;

from part of that country, 783. ;

son of

Mr. Denis, the historian of Acadia, IX., 380. Denison, major-general Daniel, III., 65.

many

IV., 520; governor Fletcher granted

the earl of Bellomont grants letters

;

Denmark, the

of,

letters of

consent, 527

attack on the Senecas by, 529

who

to, I., 55,

487;

frequent the Baltic, 109 ;

;

war be-

239; M. Charisius, resident

II.,

Hague, from, 260; admiral Tromp created a 265 Mr. Van Beuningen, sent ambassador 350 George Downing employed in bringing ;

;

about a peace between Sweden and, 416

ambassador

Sille

440

to,

Nicasius de

;

William Van Haren am-

;

evacuates

;

fort Niagara, 556, IX., 386; informed of the outrages committed by Canada Indians, III., 566; his letter read before the council of New York, 568 accompanied by M. de Tonti, in the expedition against the

plaint in

refuses to surrender Indians

;

Canada

against, 621

gant towards, 734

348

;

718

;

who comcom-

great

;

Indians become arro-

;

Dongan

requests governor

;

the Canadians pillaged

who may trade

have

to

to Albany, IV.,

army led against the Senecas by, makes an incursion into the country of the five

strength of the

at the

to,

correspondence be-

;

and, 555, 569

mitted murders on the Connecticut, ibid

ambassador

confers honors on admiral de Ruyter, 582

tween Sweden and, of,

Edmund Andros

sir

Senecas, 580

exacts toll from those

count

;

;

(See

of, 687.

388, 572.

of, III.,

earl of Leicester

can build

government without governor Dongan's injustice of, to make war on the five nations, 528 the French agents silent, respecting the

forts in his

tween

Denization, the earl of Bellomont forbid to issue letters

Naturalization.) Denmark, Prince George,



;

Denis de Fronsac, Richard, taken prisoner, IV., 677

521

[Dew

nations, V., 76; consequences of his attack on the

route taken by, in that attack, VI.,

Senecas, 731;

852; governor of Canada, IX., vii, 269, 270; sets a snare for father de Lamberville, 171, 298 instruc;

to, 564 New York can supply naval stores on as good terms as, IV., 529, 531. Denne, Christopher, IV., 938, 1009, 1135. Denning, William, member of the general committee of

bassador

;

New York, VIII., 601. Dennis, George, accused of smuggling,

New

582, 608

II.,

Jersey,

III.,

clerk of the assembly of

;

greatly contributes to a peace with the

Indians, 229; 277, 331

;

concludes a treaty with Tediuscung,

attends a conference with the Indians at

Easton, 287

;

his speeches, 289, 294, 298

Pennsylvania commissioners to

Philadelphia, 321

;

291

to,

arrives

to,

letter of the

to,

published, 416

;

322

;

fall

;

;

scheme

lays a

to en-

prepares to attack tho

anxious to storm Albany, 309

;

and the

stract of his letters to the minister

;

ab-

latter's

ordered to send to France any Iro-

;

dered not to molest the English, 330 expedition against the Senecas, 331

at-

news of the 401

;

William

notice of, X.,

of fort

governor of Canada, garrisons Cadaraque, III., 396 governor Dongan transmits to England his correspondence with, 430; an Indian account of the Sede,

seizes a

;

them

;

and of Niagara, 335

count of his expedition, 336, 357

;

;

renders an ac-

abstract of his des-

patch and the secretary's remarks on

Dongan

is

recalled,

372

;

peace from, 384, 393

government

from 1685

of,

;

;

345

;

errors

to 1689,

li-

committed by, 392 399

;

his measures

;

to leave

the Ilurons thwart his plans, 427

;

his inactivity, 434

addi-

;

three Iroquois nations de-

explained to the minister, 402; about da, 424

it,

informed that governor

his report on the French

mits in North America, 377

mand

number

to France,

takes possession of the Seneca

332, 360, 362, 464;

country, 334

on his

sets out

;

of Iroquois at Cataracouy and sends

tional instruction to, 371 ;

Duquesne reported to, 905. Denonville (Des Noville), Jacques R6n6 de Brisay, marquis 696

Iroquois, 298

returns from,

;

tends a conference at Lancaster, 330;

Moore's address

;

Easton,

at

reduction of Niagara transmitted

generally in Canada,

affairs

;

Denny, William, governor of Pennsylvania, sends a message to the Delawares, VII., 197; sir William Johnson ;

reports state of

;

quois he may take prisoners, 315, 323; the king orapproves of his war against the Senecas, 322

Dennison, major Robert, VI., 1000, 1002. Denniston, Daniel, VIII., 38.

answers, 198

number of

answer, 312

293, 300.

and of

society, 276, 277,

287, 293, 296, 306, 308, 346, 440

Senecas, 299, 324

Dennis, Patrick, lieutenant of artillery, VIII., 603. Dennis, Samuel,

Cataracouy, 273

visits

;

280, 452; reports the progress of affairs in Canada,

trap a

721.

II.,

tions to, 271

;

Cana-

cause of

urges the destruction of fort Ca-

;

;

neca expedition

of,

431, 433, 444

;

orders Abel Mer-

rion to be shot, 437, 438, IX., 1023

between governor Dongan and,

;

III.,

correspondence 455, 456, 458,

460, 461, 462, 465, 466, 469, 472, 515, 517, 519, IX.,

355

;

III.,

has no ground for waging war on the Senecas,

476

;

accuses governor

Dongan

Indians with ammunition, 487

Dongan

of supplying the

advises governor

of his having liberated major MacGregory,

612, IX., 866; governor

duct

;

to, III.,

Dongan vindicates

his con-

513; informed of governor Dongan's in-

taracouy, 436, 437 tenac succeeds, 463

the Iroquois, 496

;

quits Canada, 440

;

;

count Fron-

represents the bad condition of the

Quebec, 500

castle at

;

allows himself to be amused by

;

employs Nicolas Perrot, 626

;

requests father Milet to be appointed chaplain of fort

Frontenac, 665

;

erects a fort at Niagara, 703, 969

tracts of letters from, 801

919, 920

;

;

;

ex-

complains of the English,

the stone fort at Niagara built on the site

formerly* selected by, 963, 976.

Denonville, marchioness, sets up a shop and opens a lottery in the castle of

Quebec, IX., 393.

; ;

— Djcp]

GENERAL INDEX,

I'm, .mill.-,

IVnoUs, lit-

audita Mr. \v-

(SM PWl Ihnnmillr.)

fort.

wlu.t,

I

JS

,

m

1

Noyelle (Demoyelles),

and Poses, IX

,,:i

LOiQ,

,

expedition, ix

.n

.

X

I"'''.',

L060;

,

BirV'

'",

i"

timber

.h

the

ftgfhlml U»a Baoi

248 Mil In thai Quebec, x, L19

jOTenuw

!!•

'•'"

at,

foi

1

,

arriveiia(

.'.-niiiKuuhuit at Miehiliinakiiiac,

189

128, 180;

« •

1

1

% -il i--i





merchant of

Navi

fork,

1135

102

L024

i,

to

bill

.

,

tpp

;

,

vitamins azohapge of prisoners, 211, 812, 218.

De

at

English, X.,

offt

him

on the

I

12

moil,

wounded, 108C

;

pro

the

Ling

468

1,

member

emblj

the

ol

n ported

;

of

for

Ids

in

i

to naturalization,

463

place in the oounoil, L8S

New York

serve in Amerioa, VII., 462; the council of refuse to admit

101

defending

Novellas, John, one of the foreign

i

bench, 107; restored to the couaoil, 108;

a party sent againsl the

unsuccessful, 144

12!);

provinoe

Cornbury,

Michilimakinae, 85, 119, L26,

Denoyelle Lanoix, lieutenant, heads

of Hi"

thi

80,88; oommandanl

Mifliiliinakiimii to Montreal, X.,

De

.-ur. r

Noyelle, M., junior, oonduota a Dumber, of Indians from

;

don

com-

his

to

Sandy Ib.uk, 406

the disposition ol



;

called on fox an

;

the revenue, 647;

i

a lunatio, 649,

plaint false, 468.

765, 776; superseded In the council, 697.

Denton (l)antom, Dontom), Daniel, D'Enyelle, M.

De

(See

587, 591, 722, 728.

II.,

Depeyster, Abraham, junior, succeeds bis father as treasurer

Noyelle.)

Denys, M.

(See Denis de Fronsac.)

Denys, M.

(See

of the province of

opposes the fortifying of

fort

of his debts, VIII., 14

attends at their proclamation, 617

;

;

warned

not to assist Leisler, 647; threatened by his men,

648; order of colonel Bayard

New

;

signs an address to William

mayor

of

New

on governor Phips

at

New York,

Boston, 58

29, 809

him

denies calling

127, 143

of,

on, payable to governor Fletcher, 330

a bill

drawn by a

pirate,

seat in the council, 396 ;

;

De

117

;

;

De Peyster

of trade, 519

;

;

;

of

New

gun

furnishes

locks for the five nations, 648 cil

member

;

York, 727, 851, 943

New York,

for subsisting the soldiers, 861

barrels

and

849

;

;

memoir

of,

advances money

informed of the ap-

;

pointment of lord Cornbury, as governor of New York, 915 how long he acted as chief justice of New York, 924 why appointed, 925 suspended from the ;

;

council, 959 fort at

;

;

takes an inventory of the stores in the

New York,

967; great complaints against, 971

New York,

II.,

249, 533, 573, 574, 575, III.,

76, 233, 600, 637,

Depeyster, John, captain of the troop of horse for the city and

county of

New

New

York, IV., 810; a merchant of

York," 1135.

De

alderman of Albany, 791 notice of, VI., 132; commissioner of Indian affairs, 232, 233, 238, 241, 251; merchant at Albany, VII., 489,

Peyster, John, V., 300

;

;

614.

Depeyster, John, junior, VII., 903.

De De

Peyster, Margaret, marries William Axtell, VIII., 269. Peyster, Rachel, marries Tobias ten Eyck, VI., 132.

Depeyster (Peyster), widow,

of the coun-

attends a conference

;

of the Indians at Albany, 735, 740, 745

777; chief justice of

for the

the earl of Bellomont opposed to

liberated, 681;

IV., 777.

mention of his

reimbursed the money paid

reimbursing, 594, 633

(Pyster), Johannes,

600, 630, 631, 635, 699, 743,

deposition in relation to charges against governor

ship Fortune, 593

678;

III.,

VIII., 602; notice of, 755. Depeyster, James, marries Sarah Reade, VIII., 267, 269, 755.

Fletcher, 469; purchases the ship Fortune, 516, 592; his memorial about a ketch transmitted to the lords

Cortland, VI.,

1135. Depeyster, Frederick, fourth lieutenant of the Corsicans,

accepts

nominated, 399,411,424,

Van

captain of militia, IV., 810; merchant of

;

a bill

Peyster, Catharine, marries Philip

Depeyster, Cornelius, arrested,

387; recommended for a

trades illegally to Curacao, 413

dies considerably indebted to

407.

governor

178;

rascal,

a

;

drawn

620

calls

;

petitions for in-

;

for losses sustained in Leisler's time,

governor Fletcher's opinion Fletcher

;

York, IV., 26; colonel of the militia

of the city and county of

demnity

York,

and Mary, 749

;

Depeyster, Catharine, IV., 777.

mentioned,

658;

to,

662; commander of the train bands of

668

;

Depeyster, Anna, marries Volckert P. Douw, VI., 132.

declines to assist at the proclamation of William and

Mary, 601

for

649

V.,

the public, 67.

James, 593;

lieutenant-governor Nicholson, 594;

quarrels with

on

IV., 777; called

Bellomonfa accounts,

passed vesting his estate in trustees for the pa] ment

Depeux, ensign, at fort Frontenac, X., 36. Depeyster, Abraham, III., 5S4; letters brought from Boston 587;

New York,

to

called on for an account of Hie revenue, 776; an act

Denyt, M., killed, IX., 523.

to,

as

information

La Rondc.)

III.,

604;

widow

of Cornells,

678, 681.

Depheze, captain, wounded at Ticonderoga, X., 731.

De

Pice, Mosijs.

(See

Du

Puie.)

Depinassi, lieutenant, X., 936.

Depleine (Plaine), captain, a connection of M. de Vaudreuil, IX., 778 fleet,

;

announces the approach of the English

832; sent to arrange

rence, X., 40

;

to Quebec, 47, 72; sent to

Barnab6, 158.

fire

signals

on the

oommands l'Ormond Succez, 46

St. ;

Rimouski, 94; sent

(See Plaine.)

Law-

returns to St.

;

GENERAL INDEX.

190

Deposition as to the continuance of hostilities in the

West Desandrouins,

Indies notwithstanding the peace between the states

general and Spain, 198

respecting the surrenerder

;

of

Thomas

New England

colonies,

of fort Casimir to the Swedes, 602-606

Breedon

as to the state of the

;

John Dishington about his interview with captain Leisler, 586 Philip French about his capture 39

III.,

of

;

;

and interview with captain Leisler, 587

;

of Andries

Greveraet and George Brewerton about their interview

with captain Nicholson, 660

against sundry persons

;

New York, 740 referred to governor Sloughter, 750, who reports in favor of the parties accused, 763; of two Mohawk Indians, exciting a riot in

for

;

respecting the fraudulent purchase of their land, IV.,

345

William Teller

of

;

as

the British right of

to

sovereignty over the five nations, 352

;

of Nathaniel

Potter against major Rogers, VII., 990. (See Affidavits.)

Deptford (Debtford), stores of,

18, 232; report

III.,

from the navy yard

on American naval

IV., 705; the officers

at,

report unfavorably of American timber, 710, 722;

the shipwrights in America as good as those ship timber sent from America

to,

of,

[Di

399

captain (of engineers), arrives at Quebec, X.,

fortifies St.

siege,

draws a plan of

;

Ticonderoga, 737, 738, 788, 893

;

in laying out

and completing the works,

755, 763, 793, 814

;

de Montcalm's testimony in ant of fort Levis, 1078

;

;

to

M.

engaged

746, 747, 748,

M. de Mont-

acts as secretary to

commended, 753 M. favor of, 862; command-

his activity, ibid

;

490;

engineer at

;

aid-de-camp

de Montcalm during the engagement, 745

calm, 750

his ac-

William Henry,

fort

rendered by, 651

efficient service

;

;

at lake George, 488,

465;

Johns, 574; at the siege of fort William

Henry, 607, 621 630

Oswego, 442, 459, 916

at the siege of

;

count of that

;

;

recalled, 1079, 1089.

Desartre, captain, killed, X., 430.

Desauniers, misses, carry on an illegal trade with

1071; their store suppressed,

IX.,

New York,

1095;

charged

with furnishing liquor to the Indians, 1096. Desbergeres, captain,

388

command

in

;

commandant

of fort Niagara, IX., 386,

Chambly, 563

at

in the expedi-

;

tion against the Onondages, 652.

Desbords, captain, killed, X., 430.

711

Desbrosses, James,

795.

Depuy, captain, dies, X., 699. Derby, James Stanley, 7th earl of, notice of, I., 134. Derby, William Fitzherbert represents the borough of, VII.,

member

of the

New York

general

com-

mittee, VIII., 601.

Descents in

New

Netherland, law

of, I.,

620.

Deschambault, reverend Louis Honor6 Fleury, notice

of,

IX., 676.

763.

Derbyshire, lord William Cavendish

de Reimer, Peter, deposition

De Riemer,

Isaac, III.,

member

for, II., 562.

600, 740

captain of militia for the

;

Deschambault, miss, Pierre Rigaud de Vaudreuil marries, X., 1123.

of, III., 741.

city of New York, IV., 809 called on for information respecting captain Nanfan, 1167. De Riemer, Margaret, marries reverend Mr. Selyns, III., 646.

Deschambeaux (Desambeaux), M., aid-de-camp to M. de la Bane, IX., 236 attorney-general for the district of ;

;

Dernieres D6couvertes dans l'Anieriquu Septentrionale de

M. de

published,

la Sale,

III.,

Montreal, 650.

Deschaufont, M., a connection of M. de Vaudreuil, IX., 778.

Deschesneaux, M., secretary to intendant Bigot, IX., 335, 906.

580.

Deschilais, M., IX., 924.

Derodes, M., IX., 715.

Desclaches, reverend Jacques,

Derouin, captain, wounded, X., 1085. Dervall, William,

II.,

638

;

in-law of Mr. Delaval, Dervilliers, M.,

De Ruyter,

promoted

missionary

order on a petition

of,

643; son-

206.

III.,

180, 181.

II.,

265

274, 275

;

;

by the English,

his designs suspected

supplies ordered for the fleet under the

command

of,

288

;

ordered to commence hostilities

English, 289

against the

;

ambassador Van Gogh

ignorant of the proceedings or objects quits the

304

;

combined

fleet

in the

of, 293,

329

;

Mediterranean, 303,

date of the orders issued to, 315

;

reasons

why he

abandoned the combined fleet, 328 went to Guinea before any complaint had been made of the reduction of New Netherland, 334 news received from Bar;

;

badoes the

of,

fleet

342; sent against captain Holmes, 383

under, to pass

New

Netherland, 422, 411

governor Nicolls expects an attack from, not feared in

New

New

York, 103.

995;

sent

I., 533; of the ancient Netherland with director Stuyve-

recommended

to be printed,

province and city of

Ruyter, admiral Michael Adriaensen, defeats the English fleet, II.,

IX.,

sant's suggestions, 542 (see Boundaries) river,

Ruyter, Jan,

of,

Netherland, general Johnson translates

boundaries of II.,

63.

De De

New

notice

Acadia, ibid, 1003.

Adriaen Van der Donck's,

to a lieutenancy, IX., 714.

an Indian trader on the Delaware,

Claes,

Description of

to

III.,

101

and several

city

tioned, IV., 182

New

forts as ;

;

II.,

of the

South

197; of the

York, with plans of the

they existed in 1695, men-

of the English province of Carolina

mentioned, V., 204; imperfect, of the miseries of Canada, X., 1057. Desenclaves, reverend Jean Baptiste, biographical notice

of,

X., 107; missionary at Port Royal, 112, 149.

Deserters (Desertion), of the Schenectady garrison, particuIV., 160, 161; minutes of the trial of tho, governor Fletcher vetoes a bill to prevent, 426

lars of,

162

;

;

from New York received in Connecticut and Rhode Island, 1059 from the French, enlist in Shirley's and PepperelPs regiments, VII., 123; their declaration respecting the fall of Oswego, 126. ;

Desgly, captain, takes tho news of governor de Calliere's

death to France, IX., 743.

;

— Dsr]

;

GENERAL INDEX.

L91

Deagly, miss, IX., 1028.

a

,

hmral

.l.ia.

..f

I

Deagoutes, oount, X., 706, 833; »n toseliera,

Bud

IX.,

•,

on'

baj

oomplains

221; Lead

268,

,

;

.

"

pro\

X., 181,

oommand at fort

other

Pro]

an Indian trader, IX., 21

,

oommands

Desmarais, oaptain,

Dea Maretz, Nicolas, oontroller-general, X.,

•in,

Noyellt.)

747

at,

Desquerat, captain, mortally wounded, IX., 522.

arrives

captures three English roidshipmen

,

wounded,

Desrivieres, Julian,

Des Ursins, M.,

X., 1086.

the operations in

at,

by the French over the English, city of " Manton," X., 429 of the campaign of 1757, 627.

906,

XVawtjachtenok)

;

IX.,

671

at,

mode

;

590

for, at,

633

relief

the Indians

;

government

gallant defense of, 961

;

a peace to,

at,

173

at,

185

of,

William Johnson

sir

;

;

attacked

;

visits,

85

;

up an

major Wilkins marches to the

;

the six nations send a belt for the

;

Powtawatamies

the Tienon-

;

368

to,

379

general Bradstreet negotiates

;

the allies of the six nations extend

;

612; Indians attend

Guy Johnson

from, 658; gov-

ernor Tryon receives secret intelligence from, 664;

reverend father Carheil

commandant of, VI., 4S9 charge Pennsylvanians on the Ohio ordered

the

at,

IX.,

227

;

ordered to be

;

by the commandant at,

of,

599

;

992

;

of,

fort

Du Lhu, commandant

M.

;

325, 327; he arrives

M. de Celeron,

VI., 736; a post

300

fortified,

306, 336

733, IX., 1099, X., 84, 243; date of

the French possession

at,

Duquesne supplied from,

339

posed 383;

at,

is

about to attack, 313

a French post, 349, 802

;

have been

to

at, ibid,

303,

a fort or redoubt at,

302;

governor Dongan learns that the French

;

occupy, 309, and

worthy of

VII., 282; troops sent to the relief of Niagara from,

at,

Joseph

fort St.

378

ing, 399

533; attempts of the Indians ineffectual against, 534;

the Iroquois from, 646

;

;

M. de

384;

at,

an Indian trading post, 523, 526, 543, 635, 777, 973; sir William Johnson holds a conference at, 525, 575, 730, VIII., 85, and receives letters from, VII,

401

781

a negro

of cheating Indians practised at, 895

26, 56, 58

Indian alarm

Albany from, V.,

deserters arrive at

bound

Pontchar-

fort

Tjughsaghrondy,

(see

the English accused of bribing the Indians to

consideration,

at, ;

;

794; the French at, endeavor to induce the western tribes to wage war against the five nations,

commandant

colonel Croghan

;

Campbell

VIII., 20, 27; a military establishment to be kept

dadies live at,

;

766

Lands Dear, 7S4

the

by the Indians, 962; captain Donald Campbell murdered at, 963 Pennsylvania traders resort to, 974 major Rogers sent to take possession of, 982 recommended to be erected into a new government, ibid,

most plentiful inland place in

a boat at Niagara

denied, 493

877

surrendered, 959

IV., 501, 650, 905, V.,

of,

complain of the French settling

assassinate

to,

colonel

;

of

;

name

America, IV., 650; the French build 891,

781

775,

t

new

;

;

G94, 695, 709, 792; the

at,

the murdi

f

Frazer received from, 746

at,

.

715; othi

captured, 716; news

Pondiac returns

;

Pontawa-

;

711, B5J

of,

of,

;

on the

Detroit (De Troett), Indian

garrison

;

Detohevery, captain, X., 171.

arrested

C87;

|

necessity of the establishment of a civil

his fleet anchors at Quebec, IX., 658, 675.

in the attack

;

two Indian women at, 856; .Mr. Crawford to be assistant commissary at, 858, 859, 860, 865 sir William Johnson settles the prices of furs at, 865

Detail of a victory gained

;

-6,

ippifi

IflssJ

kills

1018.

D'Estor, captain, wounded, X., 1085.

795

Lake

-

Wyandots claim

the

at,

thi

wry at, 690 691; growing faat, 693

of the

to,

Lieutenant

Desprez, M., killed, X., 260, 262.

;

m

\.

two of the garrison

kill

belonging

sent to La Presentation, 953.

St. Paul, X.,

m

tree!

of jurisdiction of,

Despinassi, M., aa officer of artillery at fort Frontenac, X.,

Desrivieres,

route to

;

Brad

capture one

(See D
47

at

;

Montreal, 348

defeat reaches fort Fronten&C, 350;

a brave grenadier, 356 brigadier Gantes

361

;

force

under the command

his conduct, 369

;

movements, 382

;

successor

as

366

of,

;

to

Frame, oS7;

to,

comments on

400

.'JOT;

138

;

149 of

his successor

despised the colonists,

;

;

be sent as director to New Netherland, 148, sworn in as deputy director and first councilor

to

New

vice-governor

Netherland, 179;

New

Netherland, 307

Douthy's case, 311

;

New

favor of the delegates from

Netherland, 319

obliged to agree with director Stuyvesant, 334 clares that Cornelis

348

;

mentioned,

;

399

;

delegates from

the

New

Netherland request a

reconfirmation of the commission

of,

;

in England, 537; relied too

his effects

;

passed by South-

value set by the English on, 529

sold,

in favor of, 578

564;

much on M.

;

arrives

Mercier, 551;

M. de .Montcalm interposes

vindicates M. de Moutreuil from the charge of having abandoned him at the battle of lake George, 682 unfortunate in his confidence in Cana;

;

dians,

6SG

;

his

25

aid-de-camp appointed assistant

director

;

;

Stuyvesant of making friends of the

bay, 470:

;

forciblymust plead his own case, 426 of, 400 removed from the court and deposed, 439 complains informs the company of director Stuyvesant, 441

the minister of war,

462; con-

398

Stuyvesant ordered to acknowledge the commission

against director Stuyvesant by, 454

;

of,

;

;

doned on the field of battle, 419, 420; governor de Vaudreui] makes inquiries respecting, 421 writes to bad prospects

protests

;

Melyn, 355 declaration of, respecting Jacob Loper, not acknowledged by director Stuyvesant, 397,

;

4:22;

502

350,

acknowledges that he was led into error when he assented to the banishment of Messrs. Cuyter and

New

in the militia, 463

de-

against director Stuyvesant, 385, 386, 387, 443, 454

of the state of affairs in

;

much

;

Melyn was wronged by director

dismissed from

;

fided too

affairs in

conversant with reverend Mr. writes to the states general in

;

said to have been removed to Boston, 401 Ticonderoga occupied by the French after the defeat cured of his wounds, 412 why abanof, 409, 425 ;

referred, 101;

Netherland, 298, 442, 492; dissatisfied with

358

desires to preserve hispropertv,

movements,

of,

the courts of justice, 137,

referred to

;

394; M. de Montcalm furnished with a copy of his instructions, 395; at New York, 396, 535; recapitulation of his

100; complaint

I.,

;

ordered to oppose general Shirley's

;;:C>;

117, 126, 139

Stuyvesant,

his rashness, 351

sent against colonel Johnson, 383

Bends his aid-de-oamp appointed, 302,

his

report on his condition, 357;

;

recommended

is

news of

;

(he petition of,

petitions of, referred to the assembly of the XIX., 103,

;

things at

office,

452

New Amsterdam

righteousness, 457;

why

Netherland, 445, 446

description of the state of by, 453; charges brought ;

accuses director

mammon

dismissed, 491;

of un-

excluded

from the council, 529. Dineso, Charles, IV., 1006.

Dinevor, baroness

of,

lady Cecil Talbot becomes, VII., 536.

Dinwiddie, governor Robert, advises lieutenant-governor de

Lancey of the XI., B27

;

movements of the French on the Ohio,

selects Wills' creek as a

troops, 828

;

rendezvous for the

lieutenant-governor de Lancey endeavors

GENERAL INDEX.

191 Dinwiddie, Robert

— continued.

to assist, 852

reports general Brad-

909, 927;

to,

dock's progress, 957; appoints colonel Innis superin-

tendent of Indian

promises general Braddoek a number of Indians, 270 promise not 23

affairs, VII.,

;

;

summon

271; sends George Washington to

fulfilled,

the French to depart from the Ohio, X.,258; letter of the French

how he

Diogenes, I.,

115

less,

lieutenant-governor de Lancey forwards

;

pecuniary aid

[Din-

commandant,

to, ibid.

many

contrived to live so

M. de

made by M. Joliet, make new,

;

la Salle to

tants of

121

127

Canada undertake, 168

commission to

;

several

;

the French, 266, 303, 701 in making, 273, 795

M. de

;

inhabi-

made by M. de

;

be useless, 201, 211

Salle, declared to

la

in

of the Mississippi, 66S

;

la

America by Salle employed ;

from

;

Canada, 790, 791, 793, 797. Disease (Diseases), tertian ague in the Delaware,

113; a

II.,

contagious, prevails in the low countries, 262, 270

years at court,

207.

flux, ague,

and fever very

New

fatal in

England,

;

III.,

185; venereal, introduced at the Delaware, 342; dysen-

Diogorandagigso, an Onondaga sachem, IV., 805. Dion, Baptiste, engaged to pilot the English

forbidden to hold

communication with the captain of a French

vessel,

124.

Dionakarond6, Indian name of Chevalier D'eau, IV., 121. Diondori, a French interpreter to the five nations, IV., 657. Diontaroga (west of Niagara), a fort to be built

Domingo, Dirck, John, IV Dios,

II.,

Dircks, Luyeas,

II.,

VI,

at,

779.

140.

(See Hoochlant.)

Dircksen, Gerrit. Dircksen, Lucas,

176, 288, 306, VII., 341, 404;

Indians, IV., 997

;

also

New

small pox, 1061, which rages in

and among the

live

(See Blauw.)

off

by

Jersey, V., 481,

the five nations about to send messengers to

;

New New

to

the river

nations and in Pennsylvania,

&c,

York, 691, 692 York, 915

;

who

to ascertain

;

sent the small

pleurisies, Sec, prevalent in

engendered by the swamp

mortality from small pox,

the five nations, 963, VI., 362

III., 75.

among

hundreds in Canada carried

abatement of that mortality, 930

44.

II.,

Winthrop, IV., 194, 195, 196, IX., 460, 492, and prevails in New York, IV., 959, V., 924, VI., 140, 172, ral

pox among them, 487; 140, 189,

I.,

191, 192, 205,213.

Dircksen, Dirk,

;

in

small pox, breaks out in the army under major-gene-

Pennsylvania,

577.

Dircksen (Dircks), Barent, one of the eight men, Dircksen, Cornells.

;

485

250. II.,

Green bush, 728

ttawa Indians die of small pox at Esopus of the, 778

486,

1007.

,

Dirckse, Volckert,

and

tery prevalent in Albany, 727,

Quebec,

fleet to


t

;

the, 71.,

906

:

won,

DolUer de C

plaj

IX.,

lake Ontario,

revi

(',rinls a

i

the mi rohants of

:

Bupport, 295; assembles the

Albany, 296

hi

Motherland,

j

oomplain

L9:

d.

com-

11;

offers his prol

command

missions major MaoGregory to

ments on bar

trading

a

Dieskau's

le

ordonnateur, 393

attends to the

;

ml

disi

...

party Bent to the Ottawase country, 318;

submitted

to

party he Bent a

messenger

the five nations by, 320 t

to

n of the

reinforces the

;

trade with the Outaouas, 325

Bends

;

fails in his

;

\] edition, 563

attempt against Michilimakinao,

governor Denonville

Iroquois against

complains

of,

the

355

to,

370; forbid

to

of their people

by order

killed

of St. Louis, 640 651

furnish anus to the Iro-

of,

;

objei

118

;

at

Vaudreuil

M. d

;

Monti

at

M. de Ri-

537; reports i

;

report-

i

announci

;

partment,

tie

paj ing the

to

ts

652; reports

some

quois, 389; the Abenakis revenge the death of

t,

William Henry, 596; anxiot

of fort

instigates the

;

anad

movements on lake George, 593

M. de Callieres

Prench, 362;


ii

18,

436

I.,

IV.,

Denon\

of beaver wool, 572.

300;

I

ill'-

-

oh»i

In 'I..-

i

1

1-

1

1

ol

the

i

l>'

send

i

28

i"i-,

l

that

place, 306

t"

;

to foi

rendei

do

:!.:l

the Bern oas, 337; Mr. Tontl Joins, 339

Dugard, oaptain, X., Duglos, ohovalier,

135.

III.,

.

marries in Canada, X., 550, 564

command

the siege of Que-

at

;

when

of on outpost

the Eng-

the heights of Abraham, 1038.

lish soaled

fihuvj

a Virginia trader, X., 31.

(Du Cna, DuguS), M., IX., 112, 113,

ofas governor of Montreal, 207

guard

governor de

in

mands

2 12

commands

;

-.

spoken

the van-

Barre's expedition, 235

la

;

com-

the third division in that expedition, 240;

the oldest Carignan captain, 340

commands

;

a brig-

ade in the expedition against the Senecas, 359.

III.,

Prontenac, 651; sue

135, IX, 381

Is

to

362;

to,

;

M. de Crisaff

pany, 062; disabled by the gout, 666; among the iii Nadeoussioux, 795 the northern Indians imi'.Ii

detachment on lake Erie, 1023. Dumaresq, Elizabeth, II., 607. III., 490. Dumas, Dumas (Dumars, Joumas, Rumas), captain, in the battle of the Monongahela,X., 303,382; succeeds M. de Beaujeu in command there, 304 Bends ensign DouviUe on ,

;

an expedition, 396; again defeats the English, 4'U his letter to sends to the Illinois for supplies, 406 ;

commander

the

Dnguerins, lieutenant, wounded, X., 1085.

Duguet, M., royal notary,

some reward, 351; supplies Bent in commai

defeats a partj of Iroquois, 435

;

(See Boisbrianc.)

Duguu j'rc

,

tb

i

I

the

,

1

;

.n.l,

:

I-::

L81,

the

il

ior

Bupporl

Hunter desires

nations respecting

.„

iv

«o

I,,,,

the

of

Durante;)

Palatini

290

,

;

188;

,

about

renoe on the

Gtanentaa (Onondaga),

al

kinne

to

fort

al

Frontenac, l\., 235; Berves

to,

arrives

at

Chambly,

v

55

at

or d

lake

Denonville



281

the western al

from UUchilima-

I

to arrest the

'

sent to Port Royal, returns from Boston,

;

an Indian for

i

.

reKnforoe governor

the Senecas, 340; sent to Albany, 842, 843

againsl

returns to Montreal, 846, S47;

I

,,,.!,,.

Superior, 28

Dujuis (Depnis), major,

8. )4;

i

I'll

nations, 2 I"

a garrison

Bouffonne, IX.,

la

347

n turns, 383,

IX., 880, 381.

r

Duranl

to

941.

,

oommands

,i

ol

211; gives ezpls

bis return,

tin

retara to New fork, 802;

Dupuis, M.,

board

« nii the

924

.

the lord i

208

English n

lio

I

End

Taronto, 300

;

preparing

ocenpj the

to

|

857.

ronto, 302; finds

Dupuis, Nicholas, takes the oath of all 75.

III.,

Dupuis,

Dupuy, Dupuy,

the English,

I

arrives

Nicholas, at the falls of Saint Man-, IX., S04. ,

M.,

a

intendanl of Canada, IX.,

tioned,

Oswego

abstractof his

968;

957; instructions

Bent to,

letters,

the

Abenakis, 989

;

men-

964;

977,

memoir respecting the English, 985; sustain

990; his

instructed to

ordered to furnish the

new church at Narantsouak, 1002. Dupuy, Paul, king's attorney at Quebec, present

his letter to

of Canada, VI. lieutenant-governor de

Lanoey, VI., 936 ; instructions to, X., 242;

succeeds

M. de la Jonquiere, 243; ordered to drive the English from the Ohio, 244; his tetter to M. Rouille, 255 governor Diuwiddie's summons sent to, 258; letters to M. de Maehault from, 262, 264, 265; proves that the movements of the English on the Ohio are authorized by that government, 264

ference with

some of the

;

332;

there,

di

i

holds a secret con-

five nations,

267

;

340

th

;

force

command

of,

provisions sent

to,

under the

captaincy, 351

;

340

against

tee

the

recommended, ;

appointed

to a

num-

362; seizes a

ber of Englishmen on the \iay to Mi>Mlinia.jirinak, 363,

1023; orders respecting Indians

post sent to,

his

at

463; relieved of his command at Uissilimakinak, 470 Iroquois, 628

;

particulars of his

punishes the Iroquois,

Duquesne de Menneville, marquis, governor ;

control

arrives at Montreal, 482; sent in pursuit of a party of at the

taking possession of the Seneca towns, IX., 334.

935, IX., vii

to

Senecas, 337; at Detroit, 339, 383;

coureur de bois, IX., 132.

respecting Niagara and

difficult

it

324; at Michilimakinak, 325 ; to form a junction with M. .lu Lliu, 327; to rendezvous at Niagara, 331;

the course

the English, 270, 276 is to pursue towards ordered to submit a plan of operations to M. de and to have 278; supplies provided, 279 Vaudreuil,

he

;

movements, ibid

Berves in the expedition

t;4o;

against the Onondagas, 650.

Durell (Burell),

commodore

New

Philip, arrives in

York,

VII., 343; biographical notice of, X., 994; his ser-

vices at the siege of Quebec, 1018. D'Urfti,

reverend Lascaris, accompanies count de Frontenac

to hike Ontario, IX., 101

Durham (New Hampshire),

;

notice

of,

102.

general Sullivan dies

at,

VIII.,

677.

Dursley, viscount, lord Berkeley created,

Duryee, Abraham,

New

member

II.,

562.

of the general committee of

York, VIII., 601.

Dusable, M., carries the news of

the surrender of

Necessity to Canada, X., 260;

wounded

fort

in the ex-

warned of English movements, 2S1 letter of, to M. pedition under Dieskau, 323. (See Sablay.) memoir on the Ohio and the Dusard, lieutenant, killed, X., 430. de Drucour, 290 western posts by, 300 offers his services to governor Duseabury, Robert, carried prisoner to Canada a Canadian, suspected of furnishing the Vaudreuil which are declined, 306 quits Canada, Du Souchet, condition of Canada on the retirement of, 307 English with a plan to surprise Quebec, X., 657; goes ibid mentioned, 313, 314 honors paid to, 348 disregards bis antecedents, 659. to Petersburg, ibid the accounts of English movements, 365 a friend of Dusson, de Bonrepaus, Francis, commissioner for the -exeM. de Montcalm, X., 770. cution of the treaty of neutrality, III., 505, 506, 507, ;

;

;

,

;

;

;

;

;

;

Durand do

la

508, V. 620.

Garonne, M., 923, 925.

Dnrant (Durand), reverend John, a recollect

priest, desirous

order and change his religion, V., 587; Ins account of the French fort at Niagara, 588

to leave his

deserts from fort Cataracouy, 590

;

chaplain at fort

(See Bonrcpos.)

Dutast, captain, IX., 234, 236; sent to fort Frontenac, 240;

returns to Montreal, 243

IX., 504; arrives at

Cataracouy, 591; the board of trade do what they

and ordered

can

Lawrence, 505, 525.

for, 04S.

;

mentioned, 332.

Dutast (Dutartre), M., reinforcements sent to Canada under,

to

Quebec, 519;

cruise

at

the

sails

mouth

from Quebec of

the

St

;;

GENERAL INDEX.

204 Dutch, the, why powerless

at the court of Charles the first

49; not inclined to colonization, 65; expel the

I.,

English from Hutson's river, 73-81

New

I.,

discover

first

impose the bays, places and rivers around cape

Netherland, 275,

names on Cod,

;

all

283,

139;

133,

II.,

285, 564; will be despised for allowing

New

Netherland to slip through their fingers, 374 came northern parts of America before the English, ;

to the

458

;

expelled from fort Casimir,

inciting the

601

accused of

;

Indians against the English,

90;

II.,

[Dut-

200, 207

202

the,

proclamation issued by the commander of

;

project to attack the, 209

;

New York from

the, 211

commander Binkes itself against the,

213

the part of the, 233

could not defend

Andros on

against governor

duke

the

;

was possessed

;

the decision of the duke of

;

York on the complaints all that

and to recapture Samuel Hopkins informs

;

New York

that

York

of

America by

in

entitled to

the, 236

Gerrit

;

van Sweringen's account of the settlement on the Delaware of the, 342 the French victorious in Europe ;

derive their

possessions in America from

title to their

have as much right to America as any other nation, 97 outnumbered in America by the English, 132 purchase a flat on the the king of Spain, 91, 93

;

;

;

Connecticut river, 140; outrages committed at the

on

Connecticut

140-142

the,

the English and, 288

New

held

;

nivance of the English, 302 assertion,

London

324;

dicated, 380

great rejoicings in

as

sundry

New

Netherland vinNetherland " foreigners "

New

the latter were ever " natives "

if

of the country, 381

of the, sent to sea,

fleet

;

title to

;

called in

;

by the English,

;

deny the truth of the

;

for the victory over the, 342; defeated off

the North Foreland, 344

;

accusations against the, false,

New England

by

vessels taken

New

forbidden to trade to

663;

Netherland by con-

reasserted, 333;

353, and defeated, 358

382

between

hostilities

;

the, 662,

England,

6;

III.,

order for the arrest in England of a ship belonging to,

16

12 ;

;

New England and Virginia,

interlopers between

captain

Mason

institutes proceedings in regard to

over the, IV., 61; a disaster befalls the

was taken from, 343 the five nations, 352

353

;

reduce

their right to

;

dates set

up by the English

York, 508 848

;

the

;

the, 19

;

persons about to

all

sail

on Hudsons river of

to the plantation

privileges granted to settlers in

New

Nether-

land by the, 37; petition of the earl of Sterling against the, 42; losses to result to the English if

freedom of trade be allowed

to,

43

;

means

to be

adopted to prevent secret trade in the plantations by the,

45

;

44 order to enforce the navigation act against, have intruded into New England, 46 the British ;

;

colonies trade with the, 47

;

the English on the west

end of Long island enslaved by

the, 48

;

necessity of

New Orange, 878 date of between the Mahikanders and, 902

treaty

;

men among, 1017; their New York, 1064, 1065; surrender and recapture New York, 1151; most numerous in the province of New York, 1155 attempt the manufacture of potashes in New Netherland, VI., 20; rumor among the Mohawks that they are to be cut off by the, 295 when taken in disguise of the most considerable

weights and measures abolished in

;

;

by the French

as intruders, 739

eastern boundary of

Carr reduces the, on the Delaware river, 69

ment between

sir

Robert Carr and the, 71

of

who took the oath of New Amsterdam, 74

to

England from

the,

;

the, 77

;

allegiance

Mr.

;

;

agree-

names

of

on the reduction

Van Gogh ambassador

English

officers obtain grants

of property on the Delaware belonging to the, 115

;

New York under

re-conquer and re-cede to the

carriers

sup-

;

564

the,

on

;

New

New Netherland,

597

;

claimed

45th degree of latitude as the boundary of

Netherland,

introduce lion dollars

VIII., 3;

into the colonies, 72; claim from the Connecticut to

the Delaware rivers,

England

at

war with

in America, IX.

Robert

common

pope and pretender, 819

the Connecticut river long before the English, 596

the Indians, 22

;

sir

date of the

;

look on the English

;

ply the French islands with provisions, VII., 81;

to seize all ships belonging to the, 67, 85

;

as Indians, 499

the Cachnawages

;

for the, 746; hate the

reducing the, 52; collector Nicolls to reduce the, 57 Massachusetts to assist in reducing the, 63 order ;

New

York,

lord Cornbury bears testimony to the good behavior

settlement of Albany by, 735

order to arrest

candi-

;

New

erect fortifications at first

take

;

New York

at the election in

preferred to public offices in

Massachusetts, from the governor of the plantation ;

Netherland,

ever since that country was settled by, 477

treated

of the, 18

New

Jersey, 382

the five nations subject to

;

the plantation of the, 17; letter to the governor of

from England

New York

ransom French prisoners from

;

New York and New

Penobscot, 476

67;

fleet of,

the Iroquois subject to France long before

2,

,

344; the,

379

;

settle

811

;

New

their colony alluded to, 15

distance of the Iroquois from the, 21

are

York, 441;

establish themselves

;

brandy

sell

;

to

advise the Oneidas that the French

;

marching against the Mohawks, 45

beaver trade from Canada, 65

;

;

attract the

the Outawacs dissuaded

from trading with the, 84 friends of the Iroquois, 110, to whom they send ambassadors, 117, and supply ;

them with guns,

ibid

French advise the

;

five

inhabit

New

York, 198

;

the

nations not to listen to the,

New York

almost

Peter Stuyvesant's proposals on behalf of the, 163;

470; the inhabitants of

English mod.' of agriculture entirely different from

search for a passage to the East Indies, 701; desire

that of the,

164; freedom of trade to

allowed to the, 166

;

New York

order in council revoking the

freedom of trade lately granted to the, 177; approaching New York, L98; surprise that city,

arc 199,

neutrality with Canada, 745

;

all,

549;

families sent to Louis-

bourg, X., 48; offered in exchange for Pauis, 144.

Dutch brigade, why m> Dutch church.

called, VIII., 563.

(Sec Chur.ch.)

;

GENERAL INDEX.

Dm:| Dutch

oountj (New 28, 20

160

Albanj

Beekman 391

to

oi

pow red

i"

Ulster, B07;

population

population

of,

of a oertain

VI

1737, 133,

in,

153;

an

134

ordered

tia of,

march, VII., 398;

in,

L729, B79

par

census

VI., 37 to

of,

poor

the

oi

in,

ordered to be

the mili-

;

iv ml

in

ueed of a

of,

sentenced

Albany

adjoins

strength of the militia

in

of,

177.'!,

the, 365

1

>n

banged

to be

county,

" to»n

' I

rivation of the Indian word,

di

;

at

the

Duvignan, captain, commands the that

ts

be

siege

knows nothing about

79;

compliance with director Stuyve-

!

;

i.)

1

283.

,

i

b

L083

.

;

wounded, 1089. frig

laid

50, 61

i

to

a seige of

sails for

Du

France, 62

;

Annapolis, X., 53;

Ann

explains his conversation, respecting

377; well inha-

34; in 1647, state of

VII.,

Verne, lieutenant, IX., 235.

846,

in,

of,

152

Duverni, lieutenant, X., 936

n

remonstrate against the insolence of captain

;

Scott, 374; refuse

tl

Duvenvoorde, Jacob Van, father of admiral Obdam, Duverdist, lieutenant, wounded, X., 432.

De

II.,

ipted in

the porl

at

766, annual am. .nut

Duundare,

to the government, 643.

of the,

i

Dutore, lieutenant, killed, x., 130.

1

Dutchman's island, II., 409. Dutch Swedes, who, II., 97. Dutch towns on Long island, David Provoost and Peter sherill's

levi id

;

recen ed in

;

silver, VIII., 9i

bited, 441; population of, in 1771, 457; well affected

Tonneman

fi .

judge Livingston representative

J

192;

61,

;

849; order restored

867; William Prendergost

of, VIII.,

s

1

referred to, 695

greal

in

riots in, 825, 845,

and pardoned, 879

J

men

hold themselves

to

1-1;

for the

Canada expedition, 650; gover-

nor Clinton's proceedings

.

]

interested in lands

1746,392, 550;

('•lisus of, in

enlisted there for the

New fork,

1700, hi

tain exports

aot

;

28;

passed for the relief

aol

I

-I

iv

Yin b from

29; divided into

in,

Van Dam

"ii

v., B72, 909, VI.,

to be laid out in,

Mr.

;

in

185, 2

,

in, VI.,

land

oJ

wlthoul autl

aol

418

in,

Large in,

wagons

an

;

.1

Mer tndemnil

em

;

provision for the des-

1731, V., 929

trao!

and roadi

pre< incts,

in

a1

\

in

regulate the ruts of

L0

-

I

i

apo

porated

i

'

a

prevented from runnin

;

B< orj

;

V., 378

officers,

1723, 702;

in

of,

militia of,

j

truction of wolves in, 813, 872,

L85

,

a

I

militia officers of,

oountj

eleol

passed for building

tiiion

oi

li

from, 249

n Inforoi d

L698, 120

in

as of,

wufi thai

87;

Fn m

killing

foi

e

i

ll

obi

''ii

;

atj

k),

\ 01

n ward offered

;

;

205

Of lie

1\.'.,

Annap

hands over his prison

;

Ilamczay, 68. 1107;

Vivier, M., IX.,

expected

Acadia,

in

X.,

9;

acquainted with the island of Cause, 18. Duvivier,

Madame,

Duxbury,

Ellis (Elias), IV., 27, 938, 942, 1006.

X., 826.

Duxbury, ministers Duyck, Mr.,

DuycMngh,

I.,

at, II.,

160.

32.

141, 142, 143, 249, 699, III

75. man, 376 remonnames of the DuyoMnck (Dyohinok), Gerardus, member of the general lieutenant of committee of New 5Tork, VIII., 601 magistrates of the, 577 the magistrates of the, sworn the Oswego rangers, 602. in, 580; instructions for the magistrates of the, 620; 746, 750, 751, Gerrit, III., 636, 733, 601, 740, Duyckinck, conference between governor Colve and the magis-

sant's requisition for every third

strance of, 479, 480

names

;

Evert,

II.,

,

;

of the, 4SS

;

;

;

trates of the, 669; Francis

675.

do Bruyn, auctioneer

Bushwyck ; Flatbush ;

Brooklyn;

(See

lends; New Utrecht.) Duties, the patroons of New Netherland claim exemption

from payment

of,

New

Holland to

pum

and

furs,

87; on exports from

I.,

Netherland, 113, 634; on imports

into Holland from

572; onerous in

on

America and the West Indies, 225,

New

beaver,

343

observations on the

;

Netherland, 372; advantages to be derived

New 375,

Netherland trade from the abolition of 376

injuries

;

imposition

of,

375

;

to

gested,

II.,

New Netherland, from the much in director Eieft's ;

payable in

on groceries, 635 166;

374,

;

New

diminution

on beaver and

Netherof,

555;

otters,

sug-

on

New Netherland, 557 imposed indemnify parties in New Orange for the removal

fish

to

;

exported from

;

Duyn,

Joost,

Duyst, Mr.,

101.

II.,

I.,

106.

Dwight, Joseph, commissioner from Massachusetts

at a

con-

ference with the live nations, VI., 717.

Dwight, Mr., minister of Woodstock, IV., 637. Dwight, Timothy, general Lyman married an aunt

of,

X.,

333.

New Dyckman, Hugh,

in the

all,

not so

time as represented, 424 land, 429

wam-

Netherland, 262; paid in

754.

of,

Flat-

582.

II.,

the book-keeper,

Dyckman, Johannes,

I.,

452; commissary

at fort Orange, 524.

Dydelofzen, Claes, Dyer, Edward, Dyestutt's

II.,

III., 75.

608.

imported into Holland, duties on,

Dyment, Thomas,

II.,

I.,

223.

640.

Dyre, William, submits a project for recovering 111.,

207;

collector

a at

New York,

government ship consigned

New fork,

221, 351;

bis

to,

214;

instructions,

;

GENERAL INDEX.

206 Dyre, William

— continued.

[Dtr

to be

indictment

East Jersey.

England turns pirate in

;

;

against, 289

288

of

bill

;

De Lanoy book-keeper to, 302 mayor of New York, 304; amount of his indebtedness, 306

Peter

;

;

mentioned, 303, 308; frauds

305

of,

;

the, 512

a squadron about

;

pirates land at

;

Cape May

from, 542.

;

against,

assizes

court of

sent to the, 521

(See

New

Jersey.)

East Looe, lord Palmerston represents, VII., 843.

Rhode

Easton, John, governor of

from

Island, refuses a bribe

387

pirates, IV.,

captain, 310; answers tbe charges of Mr. Lewin, 314,

Easton (New York),

315; acquitted of those charges, 316; petitions for an investigation of the charges of high treason against

Easton (Pennsylvania), journal of the Indian treaty

him, 318; his petition referred, 319;

upon, 320

Saratoga

order there-

charge against, dismissed, 321

;

to

;

in the receipts from the revenue weekly, 403

.280;

pay

Tediuscung arrives

the Indians

{See Diseases.)

331

at,

287

at,

III., xviii,

338

VII., 634, 636, 643, 646, 678, 745, 772, 828, 843, 845,

;

Tediuscung sent

870, 899; biographical notice of, 763, VIII., 64, 138.

at,

437

New York demands

337

at,

New

to

;

request granted,

treaty at, 387, 388

Wyandots

to invite the

cannon sent

;

,

a treaty concluded with

;

the agent of

comply with the

six nations

VII

285; minutes of the conduct of the Pennsylva-

321

of, ;

at,

at,

;

a copy of the proceedings

Dyson, Jeremiah, member of the board of trade,

fort

in, 148.

nians at the treaty

of, 405.

Dysentery.

fort Clinton situated in, X., 79;

Indian conference

salary

;

New

Joseph Bradish of

colonies for the, 306, 307;

222 writes to sir John Werden, 239, 240 the latter's answer to, 245; good opinion entertained of, 247; sent prisoner to England, 287 proceedings in the

;

to a treaty

Jersey from, VIII., 785

;

general Sullivan's expedition sets out from, ibid.

East river, the,

E.

island from Manhathans, 285, 360;

293

Earle, Mr., IV., 315, 398.

IX.,

16;

Indian explanation

573, 580, 590, 591, 659

II.,

IV., 810

act declaring

;

it

;

East rocks,

militia officers of,

East Friesland,

New York

to

II.,

New Hampshire,

IV., 603;

missioner of the united colonies, 461.

Ebbingh (Ebbinck), Jeronimus, marries a daughter of Johan-

island),

summoned by

the Dutch,

oath of allegiance to the Dutch, 620

;

refuses to

union between Connecticut and,

to take the oath of allegiance, 28

;

808

;

647

;

valuation of his estate, 699

603

;

mentioned,

New Netherland,

.'Ms

;

pirates

the,

commit depreda

lions in the, iv., 299, 585; pirates fitted out in the

388

ernor to collate 135, 394

West and,

75

;

;

takes the oath of

mentioned, 178. I.,

602;

New

Netherland,

;

to,

;

I.,

benefices in

423, 431

whom to New York,

by

;

he exerthe gov-

625, 821, 830, IV., 269, V., 95,

government

in the colonies, considerations

offered by bishop Sherlock on, VII., 360.

troubles between the Dutch and English in in

III.,

jurisdiction in the plantations,

VIII., 693.

236; proposed to exchange Pouleron

of

III., 75.

Ecclesiastical, property in

East Indies, the English complain that the Dutch have discountries in the

member

Eberson, Master, IV., 1143.

cised, III., 372,

many

;

Orange, 533, 574, 575, 600;

gives the particulars of the surrender of fort Casimir,

417.

possessed them of

New

Ebel, Peter, burgher Serjeant on the South river,

petition of the inhabitants of,

at,

signs remonstrance

;

;

in defense of their rights to the whale fishery, V.,

474; reverend Samuel Buell, minister

596

and council, 249

allegiance to the English,

and other towns on Long island, petition to be replaced under the government of Connecticut, 197; militia officers of, IV.,

II.,

appointed curator of the estate of Nicholas Davis,

27;

mentioned, 158

534,

the corporation of

com-

III.,

I.,

to the director-general

II.,

573; mentioned, 583, 584, 586, 622, 626, 648, 649, 654, 656; magistrates of, 601; called on to take the

II.,

of

415.

nes de Laet,

Easthampton (Long

5'.);

458.

Eaton (Etson), Theophilus, governor of Connecticut, returns Dutch runaways, I., 342; particulars of, 428; com-

of, X., 68.

II.,

I.,

officer

dead, 664.

be holden by the same tenure

Eastham, reverend Samuel Treat, minister of, IV., 755. East Hampstead, VII., 430. East Hampton (Connecticut), reverend John Norton pastor

ply, 640;

New Haven,

Eaton, Nathaniel, professor at Cambridge (Massachusetts),

418.

as, II., 296.

for

island,

Eastwick, lieutenant Stephen, VI., 374, 375.

II.,

East Greenwich,

I.,

;

New York from Long

Eaton, Moses, killed, IX., 911.

(See Oostdorp.)

the,

Long

so called,

an arm bounds Long island on the

;

separates

Eastwick, Mr., naval

a distinct parish disallowed,

1026, 1038.

East Hatley,

;

the

VIII., 443.

East bay, major Skene applies for land near, VII., 510.

Eastdorp.

divides

;

why

description of the country on the, 365

north, 566

of, 47.

Eastchester,

;

of the sea, 544, 545

Earthquake, two towns in the West Indies destroyed by, in Canada,

situate at

junction of the North, with the, 283

Earl, Nathaniel, VII., 902.

VI., 835;

New Amsterdam

276;

I.,

Ecclesiastics, not to be

concerned

in

Echota, a Cherokee town, VIII., 41.

Ecu,

its

value, X., 16.

Indian trade, IX., 126.

GENERAL INDEX.

-K...,| Eouyer, oapl dn,l mi

an Interview w

i

Bouquet,

i

Eddington, Jam.

an

,

n

\

[ndiona, h uo

Ith

att

wked

546

,

offtoer

207

ryon burnl

i

of the

fortj

wo

fii burnt in,



In,

\

Ml, 673

„i

ton

1,

Bgberl en, Teuni

\

I

,

,

Palmer, VI

Maryland, advised that the paokel

810

.

baronet, rather

sir Robert,

governor Eden and of

oi

Auckland, VIII., 763.

of the board of trade,

phioal

Edgar,

,

a

\i\

;

\ii

state, III.,

Am

lord

l-i

among Hi'' Abenakis, member of tin' board

507

IX., 910.

of trade,

-,

Indians destroy

Bdiot, royal, creating

New

France,

IX., 7;

forbidding French subjects to emigrate from to

III.,

the English oolonies, 224.

290, 291, 348; earl Lou. Ion governorof the

James Coats, representative for, Myles Cooper, rector of the

castle of, VII., 36;

VIII., 187;

reverend

episcopal church

privileges,

570; requests that the

II.,

New

Jersej records be delivered to secretary Bayard, G05

be

fence in dispute, 720; takes the oath of alleghu

617, 620, 754

a supporter of Leisler,

75;

III.,

to

589,

613; one of Leisler's council, 636, 663, 679, 684, 703, 733, 743, 750

member

;

of the court of exchequer,

683; tried and acquitted, 789, 794; imprisoned, 811 Education, neglected in Brazil,

New

106; in

I.,

stale of, 300, 423, 424, II.,

469

Netherland,

in several of the

colonies, by the dissenters, VIII., 486; to be encou-

tend the benefits

of,

;

279.

attempts in Canada to ex(See College; Schools.)

Edward, prince, his army defeated, X., 45, 48,

68.

(See

Edwards, Jonathan, publishes a

treatise

Reprobation, VI., 907; character

on Election and

imh

aneral

despatch of Lieut

;

548 died without making a rep< question of bishops in America, 566; the |.

n to,

;

II.,

721.

Abenaki

Kin mi. kouit, John, an

Boston, IX.,

chief, visits

966. to

the

tat.-

general,

referred

XIX., 190;

lies

and

Eenclnys, Hans, purchases Saybrook point, Eesanques, a Delaware Indian, I., 43. III.,

Eetowacamo, a Mohegan warrior,

802.

III.,

802.

I.,

287.

II.,

name

in the

open

to

treated disrespectfully

by

and Allerton

Stoffelsen

their Letter

of sending

1

of the, 203,

mouths, 204, 212;

their

director Kieft, 206

2u7

Messi

;

the people'

solicit

letter of the, against director Kieft,

to

inform their

;

high mightinesses of the general ruin of New Netherland, 208; letter of the, to the

of the

West India company, 209

four of

the,

director

ibid;

meeting of the, 214 sends

Amsterdam chamber Messrs. Kuyter and

;

to

Holland by

their

;

fer

to

letter

the chamber at director

about the excise, 300

affairs,

;

645.

the proceedings against, 310

disclaim.-

U

in public

riots, VII.,

III.,

persecuted for

(See Nine men, the.)

)

ohief, IX., 615.

who

frequent the,

one of the nine men,

318, 421, 441

;

Jan

150.

Elbe, toll exacted from those filbert,

;

ha'.

206.

(See Fcecr

d'Elba, Anthony,

their letter to

(See Currency.)

30.

II.,

;

a forgery, 350

ing accessory to the Indian war in

presence of the, 414;

Elbertsen,

a

297, 332; con-

no voice

Amsterdam chamber declared

Eke, Tobias.

in

250

Kieft,

letter,

hail

1

Am

304; director Stuyvesant exhibits great par-

tiality in

the

threaten..

Kieft

ence to the return of their

Bkesambamit, an Abenaki

killed, IX., 643.

warrior,

Holland

to

libels

139;

I..

to

election of the;

certificate of the

192; Messrs. Kuyter and Molyn accuse.

Ejectmeni

Eedes, Nicolas, sent messenger to governor Colve,

of

earl

Halifax succeeds, ibid, 745.

Eight, pieces of,

Edzorunce, an Abenaki chief and his son treacherously

Mohegan

5 16

I

j

plained of director Kieft, 478.

of, ibid.

Edwards, Robert, IV., 1006.

a

541

i

from,

Letter

(..I.

Damen

Pretender.)

Eetewapo,

Amhei

i

;

in the colonies to be

;

53; monopolized

III.,

raged in Canada, IX., 2S

Edewartse, Harmen,

io.i

;

Melyn demand they be accompanied

an Englishman, resident of Queen's county, IV., 509.

inquired into,

538

205; scarcely dare

one of the committee of safety, 597,

;

commu-

;

undisturbed in respect to a certain

left

the English,

a

York;,

.

under the disp

to the

935.

Edsall (Edsohill), Samuel, petitions for a confirmation of

to

to

sembly of the XIX., 141; elected, 185;

Edmondes, ('., III., ::. Edmonds, Robart, IV.,

asks

dditional troops,

ol

i

id

their names, 140, 191, 192, 213;

Edmaston, Thomas, IV., 1007.

certain

on the

op]

;

Bight men, memorial of the,

298.

at,



reverend Dr. Johnson n

;

lan.l,

IX., 614.

Canada Edinburgh,

Is|

nicates to sir Jeffery

tin' lions.' of,

sovereign oounoil in

a

Wind!

Lea

bx; call

III.,

xvii, VI., 901, 903, 939, 950, L019.

X., 12.

I".:,

.ion ohief, i\., 624.

II.

CIum

.1,

VII..

prisoner

Ed eoumbe, Richard, Bdgerly,

a

i.',

III.,

VIII., 763.

noli,-,, of,

in.

member

,

kland, bio

I

,

I

E

Eden, William, under-seoretarj of

IX

.'.

boats to inierioa be discontinued, VIII., 635.

lord

i

I

hanged, X., 214.

ex


;

;

;

;

greatly

land, II., -11-

river, 289,

all

;

New

the neglect of

Lto,

14^; theDutcbmod'-ofa^ricultui

recommended

;

director Stuyvesant negotiates with the, 450, 456; expeiience high favor from director Stuyvesant, 451

befalls

arrived in the northern parts of America years after the

neighborhood

;

the Dutch will be obliged to eat oats out

of the hands of the, 459

conclude a treaty respecting

;

a boundary with the Dutch,

ibid

the

;

first

planters in

North America, 486; know of no Dutoh plantation there, 487; threaten to invade colonies, trade

open

Netherland,

545,

Virginia and

New

New

to the, 501

565,

;

131,

II.,

NetLerland,

I.,

Nethnrland, 488

encroach on 134,

546

;

135;

;

New settle

stronger than

the Dutch, 548; decline to unite with the Dutch against the Indians, ibid

566; II.,

number

150

;

in

of,

New

;

violate the Hartford treaty,

America in 1641 and 1660, 567, England in 1641, I., 568, II., 151 iu

;

admiral de Ruyter defeats the,

I.,

582; origin of the

war between the Indians and, II., 90; claim to be the first discoverers of North America, 93; outnumber the Dutch in America, 132 came to America many ;

years after the French, 139

;

commence

a settlement

on the north part of Long island, 145 are arrested and brought to New Amsterdam, 146; examined, ;

of thp,

229 the Indian war very injurious to the, 243 peace concluded between th" Indians and, 244; come from

Maryland

;

;

New York more

to

;

Netherland brings

the states general into disrepute with the, 374; of New Netherlands trade in grain aud cattle, 419 accounted fellow-citizens in New Netherland, 429

Dutch, 458

attract

to

ntirely

governor Andros

from that of the, 1G4;

lifferent

country between cape Cod and cape Hinlopen

before the, 347

Netherland, 501;

;

cooperation

with the Dutch, 314; the Butch took possession of •the

New

foroe invading

manded from the, 80 number of, in America

but are expelled,

danger from the Swedes and,

Netherland, withdraw

;

occupy the coast from Nova Scotia to Virginia, 598; i". en the five nations and tin', HI., 67

the entire of the

great efforts to secure the In-

dian trade on the South

292; the South river

Dutch, 285

fools of the

Long

after

river,

make

;

;

to the

When kill,

Indians without license,

French

fleet

the

among

345; trading

fleet

among

be arrested, 474;

to

defeated by th",

the

the

21,43; a disaster

IV.,

of, 67; neglect to propagate religion

the Indians, 209,

648

number

;

New York, 227;

of

in

of,

outdo.

the

by the

-

French in caressing the Indians, 283; peac the eastern Indians at war with' the French and, 305 under the notion of a church of England 314, 315 in New York, governor Fletcher supported a few, :

;

;

325;

the Iroquois

New York was from the

ers

five nations,

nations, 352, 353 of,

475

;

subjects of

taken by, 343

;

352

;

;

France long before

ransom Frenoh prisonright of, over the five

the French infringe on the fisheries

their view of the boundaries between

selves and the French, 477

;

them-

party, the opj...

the earl of Bellomont call themselves, 508;

Bel

up

Dutchmen at the election as their candidates, ibid at New York the earl of Bellomont's character of,

;

520; bounds of their possessions in America, 578, 830

;

the Indians informed that they are about to be

cut off by, 614, 615, 655, 657, 658, 660, V., 373; the French have as

gas as, IV., 689

;

many

friends

among

claim the river

eastern boundary, 771

;

St.

the Ononda-

Croix as their

lord Cornburv bears testi-

;;

;

GENERAL INDEX.

212 English

— continued.

mony

to the

[Eng



Enjelran (Angelran, Angleran, Anjalran, Enialran), reverend

good behavior

1017

of,

;

Scotch and, 1055

the

Jean, S.

differences in

and French cannot inhabit the continent of America in peace, V., 430; in danger of being surrounded by the French in America, 623 in a less number in the province of New York than any other race, 689 derive all their knowledge of the western Indians from French maps and books, 727 the French misEast Jersey between

;

J.,

superior of missions

Michilimakinac,

at

wounded, 338, 365;

IX., 240, 284, 293, 294, 324;

;

sent to France as agent for governor Denonville, 393 sent to the western Indians, 712, 713, 720, 722.

(See

Angelran.) Enlistments for a year customary iu Holland and France,

;

;

among the

sionaries

731

743

nations injure the interests

live

of,

on the westerns lakes,

;

their traders not allowed

;

in building Oswego, imitated the French, 908

;

726; preceded by the Dutch

on the Connecticut

596

river,

;

unknown

to

the

western Indians before 1700, VIII., 84; discoveries in America by, IX., 1; designs

52

against Canada,

count de Frontenac to cultivate a good under-

;

standing with, 126

165

rica,

463

of,

;

;

;

extent of their territory in

Ame-

intrigue against the French, 197, 295, 319,

their efforts to secure the western trade, 202

encroachments in America, 265, 701, 917; endeavor to open a trade with the Ottawas, 275,

their

289;

visit

Missilimakinac, 297; foundation of their

claims to North America, 379

483;

attack Quebec, 455,

;

towards the Abenakis, 616;

their treachery

menace Canada, 667 make assume black gowns, 703; ;

their Indian missionaries treat the Iroquois

like

goslings, 704; desire peace, 755; endeavor to seduce

the Canada Indians, 777, 960; of Boston, hostilities to

be continued against, 805

commence

settling

Virginia, 913

American

;

Acadia ceded

;

on the Kennebec, 880

;

to,

871

established

impose new names on places on the 914; early voyages to America of,

coast,

915; propose making a settlement at Oswego, 949; intendant Dupuy's memoir respecting, 985; the Mo-

hawks accept the hatchet from, sions in

America and Europe,

6

Eno

II.,

101.

(See Innes.)

some

river,

traders

murdered on, V., 492;

its

course,

ibid.

charged with cheatiug the Indians out of

their lands, VII., 590,

Ennis.

;

expelled from the Ohio, VI., 836, IX., 1111, X., 220, 241, 244

but not in England, IV., 158.

Ennesenmugge, Jan,

Enrollment of the inhabitants of tary companies,

New

Netherland into mili-

recommended, I., 389. and solicitor-generals of Engoff, communicated to the New York

Entail, opinion of the attorney

land on cutting judges, V., 925.

Entick, reverend John, his history of the late war quoted, VIII., 345.

Enumeration of the Indian nations having relations with the government of Canada, IX., 1052. Epesteyn (Epensteyn, Epsteyn), captain Carel,

II.,

648, 649,

654, 662, 664, 671, 710, 711, 715.

Episcopacy, under consideration in the house of lords,

I.,

133.

(See Church of England.)

Episcopal church. Episcopate, an,

some

III.,

of the colonies very desirous to establish

59

;

reverend Mr. Miller's plan for an Amer-

ican, IV., 182

;

papers on the American, V., 29

gov-

;

ernor Hunter urges the necessity for a bishop in the colonies, 310;

reverend Mr. Talbot

solicits

pointment of a suffragan, 473; scheme bishops to America frustrated, ibid

;

for

the ap-

sending

bishop of Lon-

don authorized to exercise jurisdiction over the American colonies, 849 bishop Seeker urges the necessity of an American, VI., 906 feeling in colonies againstan, 907 the church of England reduced to ;

;

;

X., 2; their posses-

asking leave of the dissenters to send a bishop to

western Indians at

America, 912; reverend Mr. Chandler writes a book

;

on, ibid

opponents

to,

913

difficulties in

the

way

war with, 34; cruise in the gulf of St. Lawrence, 61 trade with the Indians at the head of lake Erie, 138 of Sandusky, 157; design cutting off the communiattempt cation between Canada and Louisiana, 220 trade at the Vermillion to settle on the Ohio, 239 river, 248, and at the Ohio and White rivers, 249 seize all the French merchantmen they meet, 385 an account of a victory gained by the French over the, 429 when transplanted to America, no longer the

office

of bishop in America, 508

to be

made

same

reverend doctor Johnson urges the settlement of the

;

;

of establishing an, VII., 348;

necessity of resident

;

;

;

;

as in Europe, 462

of Oswego, 466

;

;

their blunders at the siege

;

sign to be

one intimates to

II.,

a

first

;

another

effort

about

to obtain bishops for the colonies, 518

591, 593

;

;

advantages to accrue from the establish-

of an, 600, 1002.

Epitaph on the tomb of general Woodhull, VIII., 296.

15, 76.

for

;

England from America with a debishop in the colonies, 497; no archbishop Seeker any desire for the

to

;

ment

name

made

sunt with the French language necessary in Canada,

the capitu-

English harbor island, IX., 953.

791.

Halifax in favor of bishops for America, 449, 496

clergyman goes

American, 537, 592; a bishop spoken of for Quebec, 537; progress of tlie question, 566 a bishop con ver.

all

1107.

English river (Maryland),

tho earl of

contend for a pre-

;

the Indian territory in Georgia, 951; reduce Canada,

Enitajghe, the Iroquois

;

their efforts to settle in

have violated almost

lations agreed to in America, 631

ponderance in America, 941

bishops in the colonies, 364, 365, 443

Green bay (Wisconsin), V.,

Epondallian, lieutenant, wounded, X., 431.

Equanecon, an Indian, Equivalent lands.

II.,

682.

(See Oblong.)

GENERAL [NDEX

Est] Brie (Pens

Indian war partj n turn

[Thomas,

one

|

«

Error, oature ol

daughter

iii

R

unation

!

ol

trade

"i

i

In,

i

i

ol \

:.

I

I

LlOj

,

lie-

77.

« ;

Alexander, i\

im

LIU

Alexander

98]

,

marri

726,

fan

Bspa< b

i

ii

U

[eneral

William, bai

lr

III.,

V

t,

709

;

Esprit, Pi

ootii b of, 713.

ii

i.

3

proi

head

[X., 981.

of,

Ersklne, lieutenant I

711.,

h

William

un,

\\ LUi

bIi

,

ommitti

i

iii

the

164,

,

H2

876, 128.

,

rite of,

Ersklne, Janet, marrii

X

,

V

II,

lie

,

II]

fi

oouni

the privj

ol

and plantations,

BrBkine,

of

ju'il*.)

u

Erimedok, Brie,

;

;

.

.

Brwin, Daniel, tV., 942.

ooinmands

I'Esohaillons, oaptain,

Champlain,

..i,

detachment Bent

a

to

Lake

and

j

EBkanonde, an Oneida Indian,

Indian lan-

(See

532.

[II.,

guage.) called the territory

of, IX.,

772.

over the Indians diers at, 440

war

;

397

at the, 368,

general Stuyvesant

;

.secretary

;

325

of,

the Dutch over

220;

of, II.,

years in possession

1

;

Deveri ax,

3d

L, 127;

notice of,

ibid;

Dorsi

chami

as lord

I

to, 46(i

commands

massacre of christians

at,

with the Indians

news sent

of,

promising harvest lages in, 526

;

468

;

Holland of the troubles

to

at,

Essex (New Jersey

to,

ol

militia at,

644;

Isaac Gre-

instruction

695; courts

officers

number

in, 718, III.,

between the English and Dutch

the

for

of sloops

260; differences

94; reinforcements

at,

sent to Albany from, 119, IV., 7; military

147

;

to

go against the French,

III.,

144

;

at,

pre-

Jan Smits

at,

instructions to the commissioners sent to investi-

Dutch town, 174; Bos-

gate the troubles at, 149; a

toners allowed to trade at, 238 visits,

254

;

property

at, to

Kingston

at,

315

at,

and Mr. Pawling,

;

raise a tax at,

at,

476

;

;

governor Andros

be assessed, 280

condi-

L'Estangcelles, chevalier, X., 1007; votes for the capitulation

of Quebec, 1008.

;

quota

709; Dowaganhaes

pox, 778

;

to,

Estimate, of the expenses to be incurred for the support of

New Netherland, &c, necessary to be

the government of

I.,

arms, munitions,

sent to

for the

412;

of

the

expenses

of

t

260, IX., 18;

viceroy

Canada

-sions

h

America, in 1728, 995. d'Estrades, Qodfroy, count, ambassador II.,

L55; of the

proposed expedition against New fork,

in

IX.,

17,

in

to the

memoir of, II., 349

America,

IX.,

784

;

mentioned, 529

M. de

;

St.

Ours, a

relative of, 129, 146.

madame, mother

duke

Verneuil,

II.,

Estrays, to

whom

sheriff of, 401; acts passed to

d'Estrees,

Jean, count, reduoes the island of Tobago,

II.,

revenue

of,

of,

498

;

;

two persons ;

opposed

furnished against the French,

visit,

776,

description of, 797

sends spies

to

336.

bolting mills set

lieutenant-governor Leisler, 620; Jacob Milborne 675

Amherst attempts

up illegally

;

from, on Leisler's committee of safety, 597

visits,

i,

397; Thomas fiarton, collector

tion of the excise in, 304

to

of

Martinic

L165; biographi-

obtain a grant of the, VII., 548.

;

of, in

cal notice of, 1197.

Estates, Jesuits', in Canada, sir Jeffery

076; order restricting the

to,

at

his proclamation to th

of vil-

718

416. "i

number

to, 596,

II.,

Hector, count, on the North American

Esteve, M., junior, X., 577.

of the excise,

lord Pair-

L35

the army,

clergyman, 592; a procla-

650; petitions for a reduction

ol

with the parliament

parliament en

L34;

station, VIII., 674, X., 1124;

ing to English subjects sent of, 622,

by the earl

ork eoi in the New 597; population of the county

Estebe, M., X., 1059.

venraat sheriff

jeneral,

ded

484; a

;

i

and plan-

of,

bui

represented

|;

III.,

d'Estaing, Charles

r

mation respecting the confiscation of property belong-

pared

iri



rlain, L33;

..

at,

491, 492, 504

requires a

command

L726, V., 819.

eaptain

;

king

petition to tie

of safety,

at,

to sail

lord Lieutenant ol

of,

of the commit! 6 of trade

229.

III.,

sol-

a party of Indians going to, ibid; peace concluded

;

member

;

fifty

from, 460,

return.-,

Van Kuyven proceeds

Krigier sent to, 467; Pieter Wolphertsen

478

th
,

V., 171;

rate of, in

117;

rate of, in

Now York,

and

1750, VII.,

in

New York currency and

between 500,

1738, VI.,

New

in

of,

1740,169; difference

sterling in

Exploring expeditions.

of,

I.,

107

x



|

made by

Verandtrie

.

t

1



-n

-

against

Iroquois ambas-

made up

)

1638, what thej c

in

from Holland

;

they were L664,

(See

New Netherland

Exports from

1762,

York, IV., 847.

•-

sadors, IX., 37.

(See Currency.)

in 1766, 827, 908.

Exchequer, no court

in

163;

;

reimbursed, 33, 34.

;

Explanation of eleven presents

difference

between New Yorkcurrenoy and

,

in tie

-

i.

Point, Niagara and fori Duqui

the, 711., 2

[.,

in

abandoned 842

709,

1

against

;

727

a,

i

Foxes, 1005.

Crown

496.

of,

l

an,

oi

hi. hi. hi.

Expenses incurred by the colon

inclined to approach the table of the Lord, reverend

Exchange,

lanada in

ii..

Canadians taken on the Ohio, 352.


rk

;

in

New York,

t,.

York, prohibited, VII.,

499; of grain, &c, from

271; of

of,

.1

New

767; from

New

616,617;

of,

consisted ;

1725, 774; value of, from Great Britain

81,

Long and

of

deficient,

principal

476

New York in 1723, what they New York from 1717-1723, 761

897; of provisions from

how-

;

of King's

;

494; account,

let,

262

to,

off,

poses a duty on certain,

order of the duke

island, expense of collecting, 401, 409

Queen's counties,

of

orders for the col-

;

into, 282;

fallen

from

the

;

;

nies less than the imports, 614; value

578; the magistrates

South river exempted from, 605 requested, 644

;

the proceeds of the, 593

much

what composed in 1691, 797; from New York in 1708, what they consisted of, V., 57; of tar to England from the plantations in 1707, quantity of, 118; from the coloYork, 397

rate of the, 429, 594; ought to be expended on the repairs of fort

Amsterdam,

of

an inquiry ordered

paid

;

what, 424; amount re-

;

ceived at the Manhatans from, 425 II.,

agreed to by the

imposed, 212, 300, 301, 336

;

New York

prohibited,

in 1773, VIII.. 41-. 449.

(See Imports.)

Express Indian, time occupied from Onondaga Johnson by an. VI., 770. Exton, sergeant, takes two French forts, of,

Extra

papers, William

state

to

mount

161, 162.

IV., 595.

Extradition, a case official

III.,

Knox

publishes, VIII.,

804.

Extravagant grants of land in the province of New York, judge Pinhome interested in, III., 716; earl of Bello-

mont

calls attention to

IV.,

.".27 ;

memorial from Albany against >"ine of the, 330; extent of the, 334, 503, 780; particular 391, 514, 535, V., 22, 651 "le, IV., 392;

general of

;

New York

list

of the,

quit rents reserv, d on

to be annulled,

396;

certifies to the,

the surveyor-

397

;

the earl of

;

GENERAL INDEX.

216 Extravagant grants — continued.

colonel of the forty-fourth regiment, chief engineer

recommends the voiding

Bellomoiit

[Ext-

of the, 398, 506,

674; order of the lords justices to annul the, 411, 425

in America, 647 of trade, 650

;

bearer of despatches to the board

;

drowned, 711.

;

colonel Fletcher arraigned for his, 434; his explanation of the, 447

;

proofs in support of the, 462

sums

;

realized by governor Fletcher from his, 463; proceedings before the lords of trade in the matter of the, 472; their report

on

annulling the, 506, 853 510, 622;

earl of

the order for vacating, 529

glad to learn the breaking

among

the

Bellomont directed lords

693

date of

;

549

of,

proposed

;

553

military,

recommended

act of parliament, 703

;

Faes, Johannes,

the bill for vacating the, 813

approving is

Fagel, Francis,

answer

;

to

II.,

some

Fairfax,

;

of the, 536

does not increase, 480 ;

to

prietors of, hereditary

members

Eyam, reverend William Moinpesson Eyben, Mr.,

I.,

Falcon's island,

65-1.

Paul Thomas de Gannes,

II.,

S. F., IX.,

wouuded

at

IX., 1028.

Ticonderoga, X., 729.

655.

Falkland, [Anthony Carey, 4th] viscount,

rector of, V., 423.

member

of the

privy council, IV., 103.

216.

Falkland, [Henry Carey, 1st] viscount,

or equivalenl land, V., 950, VIII., 442.

impressment

of

reverend Joseph Bernardin de Gaunes, O.

Falconer, captain Thomas,

some pro-

council,

Eyre, Robert, solicitor-general of England, his opinion on law

;

1028. Falaise, reverend

Kyles, sir Joseph, knight, one of the grantees of the oblong

the

416.

X., 51. Falaise,

have

of the assembly,

Essex in the com-

II.,

interview with the Ohio

III., 201, 203 deserters from governor Fletcher's company sheltered at, IV., 188.

an act passed vacating the remaining, 654; instructions regarding the annulling, VJI.,486;

lord, succeeds lord

of the parliament forces,

Falaise, lieutenant, carries an English prisoner to Montreal,

final disposition

;

599; serves

Indians, VII., 269.

the vacating

governor Burnet to be instructed

to, II.,

Fairfield (Fayrefield), II., 660,

act alluded to, 284; the cause that the province of

New York

Thomas, 3d

Fairfax, colonel William, has an

annulled, 48, 652,

act vacating the, confirmed, 117

;

;

Thomas, Exeter surrenders

mand

the

objections to the act vacating the, ;

of,

in the Netherlands, VIII., 352.

;

board of trade recommend the confirmation of the act reply to these objections, 24

Holland, notice

New Amsterdam, II., 460,461,462,466; the govNew York empowered to fix a, IV., 271 at

Fairfax, sir

memorial

;

529.

mentioned, 568, 734.

ernor of

against the act vacating the, V., 7; objections to the

on the act vacating, 14

;

Montreal, to be reestablished, IX., 270.

lord Cornbury required to report on the several, 1041

to the

529

Failly, lieutenant, X., 1056. Fair, at

preparing a report on the act vacating the, 844;

New York

English

Faget, Jean, IV., 935, 1006.

824; the lords of trade

an act passed to repeal the act vacating the, 1112

II.,

Fagel, Gaspard, grand pensionary of

unaccountable delay

;

conducts

620;

X.,

prisoners to Halifax, 634.

of the objections to the act vacating the, 822; probability of vacating additional,

915

New

437.

William Henry,

fort

not

Bellomont on

earl of

in approving the vacating act, 815

;

in

a hostage for the fulfillment of the capitulation of

;

;

I.,

offices

Faesch (Fech, Fesch, Fesh), captain (royal Americans),

leislerians, 713; necessity for

vacating the, 21

742.

II.,

to be vacated

between James Graham and the

23

742.

II.,

Fachion, Thomas,

approved by the king, 725 great corruption and fraud in most of the, 791; notes of what passed

solicitor-general's report

officiate

the act for vacating the,

yet

answer of the agent of

not allowed to

;

Fac simile of a placard pasted on the public York, VII., 770. (See Lead plates.)

632; the

the act for vacating the, 720, 784, 824, which

;ii"

689

requests to be restored to his functions, 706.

;

Fachion, Alice,

to be

the earl of

;

II.,

deprived of his clerical functions,

;

Fabulous account of the siege and reduction of Manton, the capital of Canada, X., 429.

to obtain a

suspend their approval of the act

of trade

whs passed by

at marriages, 692

the lords of trade are

;

to continue vacating,

vacating the, 699, 708;

by

made

efforts

;

veto of the act vacating, 533

(See Duplessis-Fabert.)

Fabritius, reverend Jacobus,

Bellomont incurs odium in conse-

quence of the passing of the act vacating, 528

distributed

Fabert.

the, 484; difficulties in the a bill vacating the, passed,

;

in

the

colonies, V., 99

member

of the privy

III., 4, 5.

Falkland, [Lucius Carey, 2d] viscount, secretary of state, III., vii.

; |

i

night, chief justice of the

Eyres, Mr.,

Falkland islands, the English expelled from, VIII., 246.

pleas, 853.

Falkin,

Eyres, lieutenant-colonel VI.,

common

III., 18.

553,

William, particulars respecting,

1002, X.,

quartermaster-general

mands the

545, at

729;

chief engineer

lake George, VI., 1000;

and

com-

artillery at the battle ol lake George, 1004,

1005; attends a conference builds a fort at

Oswego

will,

falls,

the

Indians, 1011

;

VII., 184; lieutenant-

Fall, the,

j

III.,

autumn

314

,

so called, VIII., 272.

(See Seasons.)

Kalinin, Robert, III., 193, 195.

Fallen Timber, (be battle

of, VIII., 730.

mountain (New Bampshire), Indian name of, X., falls, between Schenectady and Albany, V., 117. Fall

Cahoos.)

97.

(See

GENERAL ENDEX.

-Pau] Falmouth, Charl

Bi

Falmouth, [Hn

Bosoawen;

i»nw

fa

rkeley,

fli


unt,

1

of the

i,

men

war

of

Falmouth (Maine), IX., 265;

Indians

I

;

I34j

,

pie

i

people belonging

kill

Wall

the General

;

from, Vll., 208.

destroyed, IV., 831

in.,

hi,

I,

II.,

Farmar, Josiah, in

attacked, at,

Parmer, captain,

991;

to, X., 107.

sir

Bdmund

New York,

river,

231

;

672; the Frenob expedition against

X.,

at,

German

ascends, 675.

flatts

Fane, Francis, one of the

III., xvii,

VI., 639,

753, 755, 761, 762, 769, 771, 901, 903, 950, 953, 1019,

VII., 35,37. Fane, George, oommander of his majesty's frigate Lowe-

Cornbnry commends, 1183; 1184 to obey the orders of lord

ordered to cruise,

in

seal

New

of

the oounoil

own

the

greatly in

want

of,

New Nethefland

in !'•

f,

26

I.,

to,

rather than to pa;

land, VII., 465. (See Farington.)

Farmington (Connecticut), general Burgoyne's cannon taken to, VIII., 784.

Farms, terms on which they were leased in I.,

IV., 1172; lord

staffe,

a

for

furnished

Farmington, John.

of trade,

lor. Is

.

New Netherland

Farmers,

prefer to

the

pat

recommended

articles

visions

aol

Jersey, 24, 36.

scarcity of pro-

;

to

appointed ohief Justice

Iroquois bury the hatohef In,

IX., 363; the

'k

I

assembly of, V 201, 2 from the office of collector at Amboy fornon-i

14;

580; the Frenob had a fort on, 999

-l>;.

,

oarrli

election to the

VII.,

Detroit, 250.

Vll

of,

601, 745.

.

land, VI.. 161, 158.

Canada, IX., 519, X., 257, 653,704; on the Ohio, al

III

Parmer, Thomas, an

damages recovered from opulent, of

591.

.

Farmer, Lnthony, ;

II-.

117,

Farmar, major Robert, biographical notice

To:..

in

i,

150

for, 111.. 680.

Families, origin of the most

249;

IX.

vii.

,

u

.!>•

l

number from New i

peace oonolnded with the Indians

False Imprisonment,

Andres

101

ill..

276

ft.,

at,

New fork

Bails for

at,

436; a ship with

at,

Motherland arrives paokel

Famine

i

It.,

snot

of Bertford

one of the nasties

Into

Famine,

217

(i.

ounoil, VIII., B8, iiT

.

Falmouth (England), the marquli of

n

sari of,

I

S

Faribault,

369, 371

;

low value

of,

in

New

New

Netherland,

York, VIII., 176.

Farquarson, lieutenant John, killed, X., 728.

;

Cornbnry, 1188; sends his lieutenant of the Triton's prize,

US'.)

Wilcox, 1190; complained

;

of,

pleads orders from, in his

to take

charge

imprisons lieutenant 1191

own

lieutenant Davis

;

justification,

1192;

lord Cornbury's report respecting, laid before the

Farquhar, Hugh, IV., 934. Farrell

(Ferrall),

brother-in-law of

captain,

William

sir

Johnson, attends an Indian conference, VI., 964;

Lake George, 1005, VII., 50. Farremont, lieutenant do, wounded, X., 432. killed at

Farret, James.

(See Forrest.)

4; the board of trade transmit to lord Cornbnry the

Farrington,

,

report of the admiralty respecting,

Farrington, colonel Anthony, marries Miss Golden, VIII.,

admiralty, V.,

1

;

New York,

with

Kane (Faen),

lord,

views of the admiralty respecting,

7; dissatisfied

60.

ambassador

Sweden,

to

Kane, Mr., king's counsel, the

I.,

New York

V., 816, 822; gives his opinion on the partition act,

843; the

New

Jersey acts sent for examination

870, 923, VI., 16

;

the

New York

holding of assemblies referred

to,

to,

the frequent

bill for

V., 876

;

(See Currency.)

Farthings.

55.

acts referred to,

New York

lieutenant of militia, of Flushing, IV., 809.

(See Farington.)

221.

Farwell, Josiah, VII., 902.

Fasting and prayer, order for a general day

;

commanded

nies preparatory to the

council of trade,

Fangram, William, X., 881.

member sketch

of,

private secretary to governor Tryon,

ter,

414

New York, 327

;

VIII.,

284; 304; a native

appointed regis-

and his appointment recommended ;

to

be revoked,

suspected of writing a highly eulogistic notice

castle of

of,

by the Dutch

instigated

Cormantine,

to attack the

262, 301; the charge de-

II.,

flated false, 320.

letter

New

to,

662; notice

York, IV., 847.

28

III.,

of,

of,

IV.,

the colo-

III.,

xiv,

member

229. 230, 357,

657; William Nicoll's

663; attorney-general of

of the

572, 710

;

of the privy council, 605, 710.

Fauconier, Peter, provides clothing for the soldiers

at

New

York, IV., 925, 926; a Frenchman and bankrupt, 1034; audits lady Dellomont's accounts, 1090; one of the commissioners for executing the

and

receiver-general

of

New

office of collector

York,

1097,

1143;

officer,

1144;

detains the books and papers relating to the customs,

V., 28

;

eludes

land granted

Farewell, lieorge, his character,

all

Canada expedition, V., 260.

witness to an instrument, 1138; naval

of his father-in-law, 798

Fantyn, the king

observed in

Fauconberg, [Thomas Belayse, 2d] viscount,

Kaneuil, Benjamin, IV., 934, 1005.

of the province of

to be

Fathers of Piopus, who, IX., 477.

acts referred to, VI., 16, 32, 35, 130.

Faner, John, IV., 938.

Fanning, Edmund, biographical

78; and

of, II.,

humiliation, proclamation issued for a day 415, 637

all

to,

accountability, 37; a large tract of

110

;

complaints against, 111, 112

;

not to be allowed any salary whilst acting as collector of

New York,

264;

grants of land, 406

;

a patentee in all the valuable

pays the public money on the

GENERAL INDEX.

218 Fauconier, Peter — continued.

[Fatj

back

governor Hunter will not vouch for the correctness of

summon

;

co-proprietor of land in Dutchess

;

777,

Favre,

arrival to, 92

Feac, Elizabeth,

Feac, Robert,

II.,

exported from Boston

Fenelon, township

castle, I., 579.

how renewed by

patroons,

I.,

Fenny

552.

exacted by governor Donga-n, 495

and probates of

for clearances

earl of

affixing the seal of the

province of

lawful, V., 48, 156

170

for establishing,

184;

table of, in 1693, 216

report on, 238

283

of,

;

;

;

;

333

;

New

;

New

Bellomont, 522;

for

New York, 687 assembly of New York ;

to be

177; failure of the

particulars a

bill

respecting the

committee of the council

declared to be contrary to law,

when

estab-

of the

assembly, 296, 298, the resolution of the assembly on, censured,

an act passed in

New

Jersey regulating, 461

York, established by ordinance, 947

tary of state calls for a return colonies, VII., 889; in

923,

926;

924,

New

;

;

in

the secre-

exacted in the

of,

York, report on, 921,

payable on grants of land in the

colonies, VIII., 412. Feith, Henr.,

I.,

Simon,

III., ,

Ferguson,

sir

182.

II.,

Adam,

Ferguson, Mr., active in the revolution of 1688,

Robert Livingston transmits his

Ferrara, Juan Gallardo.

of, II.,

member

of the privy

Ferrier, reverend Jean, S. J., confessor to Louis XIV.,

de Frontenac wishes

to influence,

IX

,

Ferry, the (Brooklyn), no taverns except at Flushing and at,

425

I.,

the galiot Nieuwer Amstel lies

;

114; captain Scott

at,

at,

sioners to captain Scott set out from, 399, and n turn to,

the English behave violently towards the

401;

402, 403; riotous conduct of captain

of,

;

at,

404

mentioned, 463, 507

Cartwright's

Felons, no opposition to be allowed to their importation into

the colonies, VI., 791.

II.,

394,397; the Dutch commis-

;

;

troops from New Eng-

company

at,

IV.,

503

at,

14;

;

;

stationed

at,

482, 483; colonel

at,

502; two English

commissioners appoinl

troops tor Albany ordered to

acts

at,

certificate as to the violent

conduct of captain John Scott

a case of, IV., 423.

M.

93.

Ferrol, an expedition sent against, X., 31.

445

7."».

passed

relating

to,

embark

V., 782, 847.

(See Brooklyn.)

reverend James B., his opinion of

sir

George Downing,

418.

Ferry (Harlem

|,

strangers not to be allowed i« oross

out a pass,

lieutenant

31.

an English vessel, X., 169.

Ferret, captain, captures

land and the east end of Long island stationed

348.

III., 132.

William,

II.,

council, IV., 62S, 1127.

gulate, 669, 670

II.,

698;

(See Gallardo.)

Ferrers, [Robert Shirley, 1st] lord,

companies

Felton,

III.,

letters to the secretary

of state through, 709.

Felo de

Felt,

of the board of trade,

xix.

III.,

Felling.sbro, reverend Mr. Acrelius pastor of, VII., 168. se,

member

baronet,

Scott and his men

Felk, Cornelis, X., 883. Fell,

Fergotsky, Peter,

inhabitants

30.

Felissant de la Rocque, siege

Fellepe,

York, IV., 166; «

drawn Fernando, a Spanish negro, sold in New Netherland, the Fernando Noroncho, I., 100, 102, 105, 110, 115.

the board of trade call for the table

lished without consent

359

New

tailor, 310, 388.

difficulties respecting

of,

some

411

wills in

an ordinance

;

;

establishment of a bill establishiug,

the

;

passes a bill regulating, 82

III.,

for denization,

;

York received by the

up

John, a catholic in

(Peny),

Ferdinand, prince, victorious over the French, VII., 405.

Fees, established by a committee of the assembly,

when

385.

II.,

III., 159.

popish

Feberin, Chatarina, V., 53.

;

of, IX., 112.

Fenn, Mr., a magistrate of Milford, Connecticut,

402.

Feber, Isaac, V., 53.

IV., 521

biogra-

;

phical notice of, 112.

Fenner, Mr.,

I.,

Francois de Salignac de, accompanies

count de Frontenac to lake Ontario, IX., 101

Feber, Abraham, V., 53.

Feecx, Tobias,

the Dutch send delegates to,

;

Indian missionary, IX., 112.

144.

Feach, Mr., a prisoner in Windsor Fealty and Homage,

grants an audience to Messers Heer-

;

Fenelon, reverend

to, IV., 790.

144.

II.,

their

of

more, 118; sends deputies to the Delaware, III., 344. erroneously said to have been an

Fay, Mr., agent of the people of Bennington, VIII., 311. fish

New

Heermans and Waldron

Fenelon, archbishop,

Fay, lieutenant, wounded, X., 1085.

Fayal (Fial), cod

writes to the director of

;

Messrs.

;

112; raises a faction in Maryland against Lord Balti-

to the six nations from, 514.

IX., 160.

,

S7

mans and Waldron, 94

notice of, VII., 511; a

32;

VIII.,

message delivc-red

claims the

instructed to

;

request secretary Calvert to send notice

IX., 287.

,

67;

of,

the Dutch there, 70; vice-director Alrichs

Netherland,

Fauquier (Faquiere), Francis, lieutenant-governor of Virginia, VII., 511,

memoir

64;

II.,

protests against, 73, 75

county, VI., 29.

Fauconnet,

deserters,

country lying on the Delaware, ibid

;

his accounts, 476

governor of Maryland, requested to send

Fendall, Josias,

takes two mere warrants of the governor, 407 receiver-general under lord Cornbury, salaries, 408

in

Shirley's

282.

Fences, an aot passed to regulato, V. x 390.

regiment,

X.,

II.,

at,

with-

603.

Ferry (.New York), once kept by William Morris, V., 335. Ferte, captain de

Fervau, Mr.,

I.,

la,

25.

IX., 235,

i

I

.

GENERAL INDEX

n] ti

in.

the

bj

i

219

allowed to be

,

on the

n1

(

|

nao,

I

\

rland,

78,

1

,

bold

to

of,

di

men

rt., a

banl

New

al

of the

ioeroy

ri.i, l\.,

78

appointed,

Feydeau

nij

i

Hoyk

d

X.,

.

Fiedmonl (Pi

9!

I,

,

a

d

icap

J

7; votes

d

892

B91,

;

of

the siege of Quebec,

al

;

X.,

,

a

1008.

o,

Fielding, captain, Fier6, Andreas,

ohei n

'/

j

Sillt

to

Brazil,

to

I

exported

.\.-u

Netherland, 769,

St.

John,

547?

I.X.,

makinac, 888.

New

Netherland,

of, \

I

,

915.

.

306, 314;

[J

on Long island, 402;

wounded,

la,

justice

X., 430.

sir

II!.,

229

;

534;

of, II.,

mentioned, 269

xiii,

191, 192.

white, at Detroit and

Finch (Finsh), John, IV., 937, 1008.

to

the Delaware river from,

242.

II.,

of horse, IV., S09.

the Delaware and go to Maryland,

on the Delaware

in

about to

sail to

continued. 605 III.,

II., ;

number

the Delaware, 212; privileges

on the west side of Delaware

;

I.,

IOCS, wealth of the, 210

particularly fitted for the Delaware, 211; a of,

of,

river,

113, 182; insurrection of the, 1S6.

Finsbury, reverend Bast Apthorp prebendary Fire engines, the city of

two, V., 909

;

in

wrecked

off, III.,

to

375.

purchase

in

their object

an act passed

for the better extinction of, VI.,

in the city of

197.

established in

about to be

;

at

;

patroous

New York, New Y'ork for

upon Long

set

Newfoundland, 573

;

island, 237;

New York

aban-

French of Acadia

475, 521, 546;

French claim the exclusive right

to the

deep

the sea,

176; the English right to the, ought to be maintained,

New

478; the staple of Massachusetts, 790; deserve the of Nova Scotia most greatest encouragement, S55 ;

valuable, V., 593; engrossed by

119

the French,

594;

of cape Breton, an annoyance to the English, VI.,

229

;

queries submitted to the lords of trade on the

subject of the, in the northern colonies, VII., 521

Mount Lewis, 715; number

lished at

seal, in the St.

in

;

encouraged in Canada, IX., S7; necessity of

encouraging the, in the French colonies, 444 in the, 757

ami Normands engaged

344.

before Quebec, 1017,

m-en em-

the Basques, Bretons

;

in the,

Lawrence, 794

of

estab-

;

;

7S1; for porpoise and

number

of, in

Canada

1721, 907, 908; in danger of being monopolized

by the English, X., 4; of the England, 5.

1019. Fires,

31.

149;

556; near

to erect, II.,

183; a company

settling, 234;

ployed by France

Fire raits constructed along the river St. Lawrence, X., 41, fail

patroons within their colonies, 402

granted the right

to be of, VII.,

New York empowered New York, VI., 186.

Fire island, the prince Maurice

95, 159;

III.,

III.,

477; origin of the French disturbance of the English,

Finns, the, on the South river allowed religious freedom, deserl

of the council for trade,

disturb the English, IV., 426,

Finland, emigrants senl

of,

Hendrick Cornelissen, 150.

doned, 355

Finne, Jonathan, quartermaster of the Queen's county troop

;

Miohili-

George Germaine, notice

project for the establisment of, in

Fine, James, IV., 1G2.

608;

of,

in the river

;

l

III.,

John, knight, member of the council for foreign

plantations, III.,

S9

IV., 790

b m to ncouraged, I., 155,433; encouragement demanded for the, 260, 268; permission for curving on, 401, 404, 623, 633; an exclusive right

Fisherie

of

Heneage, knight and baronet^ memoir

referred to as lord keeper,

Pinch,

various sorts

38;

III.,

(See Codfish.)

member

William,

killed i

of the excise

oant de

New

abundant

Fisher, William, of Esopus, ordered t" be tried,

in King's county, IV., 28. rati

England

dry, from

Ho

VIII., 739.

31.

II.,

Ph ill ipse.) ian h

c

native

a

(ana. 1. 1. X., 417.

id

sir

dtr

Fislnr, John, VII., 29.

Figa, a Spanish slaw, sold in

(See

in

Nw

>

i

free of dutj

,

V., 53.

f

Spain and Portugal,

Fisher, John, secretary to lord

li

Van

.

.,

216;

664.

l\ '.,

Anna Maria,

.Wlln iland,

ported

'

Fifeshire (Scotland), sir Peter Halketl

Filtre,

l>,

V., 52,

New

Fish, of

in

Fier6, Daniel, \\, 53.

Finch,

Van

;

ihovrn.)

Id

i

Netherland

)1

Field, Zachariah.VI., 303.

Filipzon.

683, 684,

V., 52.

b,

Fi

Field, colonel, killed, Yill..

Fiere,

Lampo

ii

in

\

L9S.

II.,

oolonial artillery, D28, 936

99

II..,

,

'l

Feytama, Jacob,

iii.

II

784.

I,

Fever, Lnte-rniitten potto

William Knyff

,



er,

Holland on

In

sent again

la,

i

n

|.',.\

dutj

;

II

Feuillade, oounl

Feuquli

401

I.,

horn the king

Coi

,'

greatest interest to

New

;

York, extensive, 185, 186, 196,

Fisher's island, on,

111.,

I

,

544, 545

;

the French

752; mentioned, V., 599.

commit mischief

;

;

GENERAL INDEX.

220 Fishing places of the

five nations, IV., 654, 655,

Flanders,

657, 658.

branch of the Delaware, VI., 124, 647. Fishotte (Newfoundland), French vessels captured

New

the coast of

French take several towns

X.,

at,

Fitch, colonel, at the treaty of fort Stanwix, VIII., 122.

ties

Fitch, major Eleazer, VI., 1000, 1002, 1007, 1011.

VII.,

590

W.

sir

162;. the French send

mentioned, 595, 601, 616, 617, 641,

sends large bodies of troops

Paulmy commissary general

Leisler,

cessation of hostili-

;

Erskine serves

the proceedings of

;

commends

671;

345;

I.,

154; .the

Abercromby serves

colonel

;

that of,

III.,

VIII.,

in,

in,

713;

major-general Braddock serves in, X., 304; France

Fitch, captain James, a delegate from Connecticut to captain Leisler, III.,

453

VI.,

in,

in,



IV., 208; the colonies

in,

cut off from a trade with, 1086

415.

II.,

in,

army

Indians to see the

59.

Fiske, reverend John,

Netherland like

179; M. de Tracy's son served

Fishkill, a

598;

390

to,

the marquis de

;

535

in,

M. d'Estrees

;

serves in, 962.

sent to Albany, 707.

Flannaverres, Andrew,

Fitch, Jos., IV., 193, 195, 196.

Fitch,

[Fis

Thomas, governor of Connecticut, his attention called to illegal trade carried on there, VII., 272 letter to governor Moore of New York from, 819

III.,

489.

commenced

Flatbush, settlement

at,

I.,

552

498,

;

captain

Scott invites director Stuyvesaut to a conference at,

393; two inhabitants

II.,

on

of,

Lei.slcr's

committee

;

biographical notice Fitch,

of safety, III., 597; William Axtell, a resident of,

of, 820.

VIII.,

Thomas, master of the ship Samuel, V., 712 arrives in New York, 739 certifies that he delivered governor

269; governor Tryon

retires

to,

638,

686;

;

chief justice Horsmanden dies at, 753.

(See Midwout.)

;

remonstrance against captain Scott and his followers from

Flatland,

Burnet's despatches to the postmaster at Deal, 740. Fitch.

(See Regiments, provincial.)

Fitzdale, John, killed at the battle of lake George, VI., 1006.

Edward,

privy council,

member

of,

403; referred

to,

365

II.,

;

420; in danger of

Flax, samples of, sent from

Delaware,

166.

III.,

36

;

setts

Fitzherbert, William, lord of trade, III

,

xviii, VII., 763, 772,

I.,

;

cost of raising, in

Fleet,

New York,

IV.,

better adapted than Massachu-

315; raised cheaper in Ireland

;

may be raised in Nova Scotia, New Hampshire, 595 not a farm in the New York but can raise, VI., 19.

in

Thomas,

;

;

province of

(See Biographical notices.)

Augustus, accompanies governor Cosby to

211

II.,

for producing,

V., 593

155, 164, 195, 196, 203, 210,

684.

II.,

Flelius, Lydia, X., 882.

New

York, V., 937. Fitzwalter, Benjamin Mildmay, 1st

Netherland to Holland,

New York much

than in America, 439

843, 845, 847, 870, 899, 920, 943, 944, 1005,

VIII., 19, 31, 64, 138,

New

37; duty in Holland on, 572; easily raised on the of the

Fitzherbert, Alleyne, created baron St. Helens, VII., 763.

[Fitzroy,] lord

1647,

Flatnose, an Iroquois, waits on governor Clinton, VI., 390.

IV., 936, 1008.

Fitzharding, [Charles Berkeley] viscount,

277.

of the, in

state

being ruined, 487.

IV., 808.

828,

412;

the farmers

Fitchen, Enoch, lieutenant of the militia of East Hampton,

Fitz Gerrald,

I.,

Fleming, Edward, earl, first

member of

the general committee of

lord of trade,

New

York, VIII., 601 lieutenant-colonel of a battalion of independent foot, ibid. ;

III., xvii,

Five pound

VI., 33, 35, 36, 41, 70, 83, 89.

act, objections to the, VII.,

manded, 980; further objections Flackson, Livinus, VI.,

979

its

;

repeal de-

Fleming, Edward, captain of the Corsicans, VIII., 602. to the, VIII., 167.

781

New

Flag, brought from Holland for the burghers' corps of

Amsterdam,

I.,

445

wy ck hauled down, len,

II.,

Fleming (Flemen), Richard, found guilty of mutiny, IV.,

61.

;

of the patroon of

522

;

Rensselaer-

English, hoisted in Breuck-

404; required for the forts in

New York,

IV.,

244; sent from England, 256; of colonial ships to

be different from that of his majesty's ships of war,

;

mentioned, 938, 1008.

Flested, Richard, IV., 1008.

Fletcher, Benjamin, governor of

818; commission

III.,

vania, 835, 856

847

;

council,

York, 848

137

;

vessels in the plantations,

instruction respecting the colonial, VI., 201

truce, sent

from Albany

war in New York

Canada, 452

to

;

birdgee, 571; sent by the English to the IX., 228,

800

;

one of the Seneca ;

of

Mohawks,

taken from the English, deposited in

the church at Quebec, 491

902

;

a man-of-

a pleasure boat carrying a

fires into

;

hoisted by the French in

villages, 899

;

report contradicted,

of the English, torn at Narantsouak, 942

Senecas request a French, 1091

1094; taken at Oswego,

how

;

;

the

color of the French,

disposed

of,

X., 486.

New

York, instructions

to,

827; governor of Pennsyl-

New

York, 846, IV., 443 in his government, III., ;

suspends Messrs. Dudley and Pinhorne from the

927; for privateers, the admiralty has no objection

by merchantmen and other

of,

arrives in

reports the state of affairs

to the proposed, V., 40; description of, to be

worn

;

and appoints James Graham recorder of ;

certifies objections

ment of Connecticut, Canada, 854

849

made

prisoners examined before,

;

New

mander-in-chief of the militia of

news from 855 com;

Jersey, 860

his instructions as governor of Pennsylvania, letters of, to

Mr. Blathwayt, IV.,

New

to the govern-

transmits

;

861

13, 31, 37, 54,

2,

157, 165, 204, 243; to Mr. Dudley from, 2; to sir William Phips from, 3, 66 Abraham Governeur's opinion of, 4 letters of sir William Phips to, 5, ;

;

67

;

of major

Albany,

7,

245

Ingoldesby ;

letter of

to,

6,

William,

80,

114

III. to,

of his expedition to Schenectady, 14

;

;

goes to

12; journal

major Schuy-

;



GENERAL INDEX.

Fi.ic ]

Fletohsr, Benj uni

ni

Ler'a report to,

19;

lerved agalni

the

nations

I

22

to,

mm bii

pi

i

oh

in

to the

Hi

oouni

privj

H

rt

nai

French, 21; an

2"";

name Lven bj the En immander ol the "in notions i" VII., 819 ;

2a]

the

to

,i.

pi

im

Robert Livin

i

ton

201

to,

i

.

|

i

ur,

drui,

29,

Lodwiok,

Conner principle* letters

[bid

;

34

of,

;

William

of

letter

;

England, 36;

to

to

;

32

IV.,

Bends extract*

il

Mr.

ol

Penn

-

Thomai

Letter of

aeon tarj

letters of, to the

ol


7;

'roes,

imported mi

;

lanufactnred for exportation

415

attle of, VIII.,

548; Philip

VII.,

of,

155,

I.,

consequence of the

price of, fallen in Brazil in

;

713,

(See Lan&

lie.

sported from NewNetherland to Brazil,

216

.,

715.

tration, V., 38.

Flour, tol

to,

VIII.,

William

of fori

.

:

of

ask

an tndi

Campbell com-

i

620.

08

Mohawks

the

Jellia,

.

West, 72-.

British forces in

ili"

the

discos erers of the

flrsl

West, X., 333

mands

on

h

37i

for,

sail

X..

Ribault

:

and Laudonnier

721.

Fonblanche, M

i

William, wounded

Forcet, lieutenant,

wounded,

wounded, X

.,

Ll

Forckeubeeck, Erasmus,

II.,

193.

at

Loyal Hannon, .

v.,

'.'4-.

730.

750, 799; captain, mortally

;

;

GENERAL INDEX.

224

[For

Ford, Giles, IV., 1008.

for

Ford, Philip, IV., 34.

Europe,

Ford, Richard, VII., 903. Ford, sir Richard, one of the council for trade and naviga-

431. Forrester, sir

Ford (Fort), Southerland, a prisoner in Canada, surrendered Ford, William, trades with the Indians near fort Crania,

I.,

Forster, Miles,

privilege of nominating

magistrates

626;

625,

673

721; a manor, I.,

III.,

638;

of,

by Massachusetts, 111

Francis Beado

Canada, X.,

De

government,

II

297

,

employment

of, I.,

Mr. Penn recommends the

;

of,

IV., 757

New York

the majority of the inhabi-

;

462

are, VI.,

in Pennsylvania, 823

;

a

;

number

driven from

trade to Canada, IX., 223

;

of, settle

New York

;

major of

Twiller governor

409

LonI.,

to be protected, 233 fort

;

;

ceeds to the Illinois, 273, 395

Frontenac, 292 ted, 434, to

453

;

;

at

;

to,

264

;

;

to

starts for

at Detroit, 857;

pro-

499

to,

,

between

at,

menton Long island, III.,

21,

II.,

146-150;

sells

land on Long

22; governor of Long island, seal

thither with settlers, VII., 431.

(See Forrester.)

erection,

stone,

imports and ex-

II.,

;

;

;

at,

214

ruin, 303, 337;

wind-mill

;

the

;

distance

;

498;

of,

423

in,

repaired,

some English145 the Englishmen brought to arrest

;

365

invested, 376

;

strength of

description

of,

surrendered upon treaty,

New York;

;

seized

when

garrison

its

at

the tine' of

its

the people refuse to de-

;

III.,

(See

164.

Fort James; Fort William;

fort

county), description of the portage

Edward and,

making settlements

146; lands

posed

all

at,

;

VI., 131;

settle

granted south

to be repaired

immigrants, 630

for

lieutenant-

Scotch highlanders of,

VII., 615

;

pro-

the reception of highland

in 1744, IX., 1101;

defeats a party of French near,

ing p'ace.)

French pro-

IV., 194; the

governor Clarke proposes to

Forpp, John, IV, 1006.

its

be built of

preservation

state of, in 1647,

Ann (Washington '

IX., 120.

river, 107, II.,

Fort William Hendrick.)

l>

Forrest (Farret, Foret), James, authorizes an English settle-

Lsland,

;

fend, 475

Fort

705.

Formont, Mr.,

146

ship

;

population around, 181

;

an armed party sent from,

Fort George,

disturbing divine service,

173

surrender, 440, 441, 499

force required by, 867.

of, for

;

surrendered, 422

superseded

erection in the colonies, VI., 604.

19.

Wouter Van

date of

;

to

to repair, 345

by the English, 415

supposed author of a memoir on

Forman, Samuel, sentence

at,

43, 44

I., ;

on the North

,

recommended

men on Long island,

be assis-

Forges, plating, an act passed in England to prevent their

II

133;

II.,

citizens refuse

Michilimaki;

81

152; to be repaired, 153, 161;

instruction for the

obtains a grant of fort St. Louis, 494

nac, 526; at the fort of the Illinois, 700

;

of,

utterly defenseless, L, 139

and council hold their court of Magdalen island from, 284; a

leaves a clerk at tort

Cataracouy, 332, 362

proceed thither, 520;

Detroit, 866

;

80

at,

director

not yet returned from

Frontenac restored

II.,



the inhabitants skulk in straw huts around, 190

his

about to return to Canada from France, 223,

France, 243

about

;

the Senecas,

visits

Amstel.)

William of London arrives

149,

;

so called, VII., 285.

Fort Amsterdam, on the island of Manhatas,

fort Frontenac, IX., 168,

count Frontenac, 189

letter to

why

New

(See Fort

Fort Amstel.

for

ports to be entered la,

;

(See Altona.)

excluded from that coun-

sends Tegannisoren to Montreal, 183

724

Fort of the Alibamons, where, X., 951.

don, IV., 258. Forest (Foret), M. de

New England

;

at,

Fort Altona, a vice-director proposed to be sent to,

(See Naturalization.)

Forest, M. de la, governor of Hudson's bay, carried to

an English force

;

Fort Allen (Pennsylvania),

VIII., 564; forbidden to

want of naturalization laws, try, 985.

the Dutch about to reduce, 202

the most advanced frontier post and the great fur mart, 725. (See Albany ; Fort Anne.)

of.)

passage of a general naturalization law for the en-

couragement

;

Indians supposed to have obtained arms from, 242;

to

within the duke of York's

;

;

137

(See Trade, board

for.

at,

104; claimed

at,

Mohawks brought to, 118 way very bad from Hartford to, 121 governor Nicolls at, 134, 162; captain Baker commander of,

17.

at liberty to settle

213, 284

articles

news of governor Courcelles'

;

the

described, 260

Foreigners, the Dutch complain of the

tants of

593;

II.,

expedition against the

of,

Foreest.)

send reverend Mr. Maillard

of,

Foreign plantations, council

;

Hampstead, IV., 809.

749, IV., 624.

67; troubles with the Indians

III.,

303.

(See

327.

Foreign missions, board

;

III.,

Fort Albany, to be called fort Nassau,

magistrates,

its

John Archer demands the town books

;

Foreest, Isaac,

191

;

214. militia,

creates a disturbance at, 665; letter of governor Colve

491

VII.,

agreed to by colonel Cartwright and the Indians

Fordham, obtains the

;

Spithead,

Forsan, lieutenant, IX., 535.

IV., 808.

439

sent back to

is

at

Fort (Vort), Simon, Indians refuse to surrender, X., 212,

73, 76.

Forde.Luke, IV., 937. Fordham, Joseph, lieutenant of the Southampton

II.,

released

is

Forster, Jon., ensign of militia of

by the French, X., 213, 214.

to,

286;

I.,

Mark, a commodore in the Spanish service, an Irishman, ibid.

VI., 243

tion, III., 31.

and

the countess of Stirling,

Ford, Nathaniel, plundered by Indians, V., 793.



Long island

Forrester (Forester), captain (or major), claims

X

,

major Rogers

851. (See Carry-

;

.

GENERAL INDEX.

For] Port Ann,.

Ubany), de

(

of,]

i,

I

Fori Arnold,

riptloq of, IV., 968;

i

Fori I'Aasoraptlon,

vn

where,

777; M. de Boisheberl

,

Beaus jour reduoed, M.

-I

263;

de

817;

portion of

its

314;

;

to

II

on

397, 912

381,

299

to,

fort

Cumberland,

respecting

the

a

;

badly

le

Baouff (Portia Riviere

O

VI., 832;

description of 837, X., 259;

abandoned, 529.

its

at,

location,

description of tbe belt sent to the live

nations on the destruction

an

170;

137

of, VII.,

account

of

cause of

;

its

;

its

expedition

the

battoes cut off near, 467

building near, 476

fort

G74

;

;

another

distance from Oswego,

Fort Carillon, taken by the English, VII., 399 X.,

398, 403

;

two

II.,

Montcalm and chevalier de Levis visit, 441 completed, 4S0; captain Germain draws a plan of, 491; well provided, 519 an expedition against fort William Henry rendezvous at, 544; occurrences at, 569; an English detachment defeated near, 646 its condition ;

;

;

684, 897;

721

;

its

;

map

showing. the location

condition in 1758, 763

the English

prepare scaling

English defeated

at,

at,

and approaches, 707; memoir

of M. de Pontleroy on, 720 of,

commandant

captain d'Hebecourt situation

its

w

809

made

;

refresh

b

re isonj

;

for buildl

Dumber

968;

at,

at

a p

;

;';

oannon

of

aneasj on the

at,

oral boil

IX.,

importance,

300;

deserters

Uorvilliers in

command

at,

369

the demolition

of,

436; the garrison returns

l.'i;

,

to

at

Montreal from, 437

condition

104

Inished,

;

returned

to,

112;

its

318;

M.

governor Prontenao

;

ordered

;

1691, 501;

of, in

bo razed, 446, 454

to

;

memoir concerning, 591; 805.

affairs of,

;

worthless, 769

;

ladders for, 808; the

details

Shamblie), distance

Laprairie, III., 803; in Canada, V., 972; the take, VIII.,

(Se«

211

a military force posted

;

pass,

tant

299

tbe

;

of the

battle

Iroquois lay siege

1038;

at,

4S0

;

at,

X,

1095,

36

at,

196;

repaired,

lieutenant

de

length of the portage

;

a miserable hut, 763 at,

390

to,

chevalier de Clermont retreats to, 480;

cannon

IX.,

a most impor-

290;

at,

of, from Americans

respecting,

particulars

662;

644,

lieutenant-colonel

;

1078.

Fort Charles, the French build, IX., 267, 702.

Fort Chartres, the governor

regi-

soldiers killed near, 401,

;

427; called fort Vaudreuil, 402, 403; fortified, 425, 426; marquis de Montcalm's report on, 432; M. de

in 1757, 65b';

792

Roquemaure stationed

Fort Cannatchocari, description of, X., 677, 678.

Fort Cape Corse, admiral de Ruyter ordered to retake, 289; proposed to be razed or exchanged, 419.

at,

Iroquois taken

VI.,

at,

troops

few

I

|

ktloo

founded,

at,

Fort Cananistigoyan built, VI., 893.

ments

;

the ftve nations

;

from

of,

a

flt

348

.,

Beaulac commandant

colonel Bradstreet retires to, 888.

;

;

Fort Frontenac.)

Fort Hull, destroyed, VII., 82, 132, X., 397, 426, 429, 492,

destruction,

! rd mi, 8 12

supplied with proviaioni ir..m Onon-

Port Chamblie (Chamblee,

Port Bridgeman burnt, X., 144.

against, X., 396, 403

l\

at,

be

'

an inquiry instituted into the

Fort Brewertou erected, VII., 577.

;

very

r ol

Pranoe, v.,

to

angry

Vll., 2(39;

529, 547, 557

pro*

foi

.

wart

numb

fortj

themselves

Vll

M. Marin dies

Boeff),

era

969

Port Booa Chioa, the French take, IV., 277.

Fort

607

an

358;

588, 593, 594, 595.

I.,

:

\m

,843

Hi" Prenob

.surrender of,

the English fortify, 685.

Porl Beversreede,

61

i.>

tanoe

16; dl

ill

iataraoqut, a

:

progress,

In

maroh

his

token prisoners, 303;

oalled

ordered

men

frontier

;



nations, 532;

X,

250,

Una, Porl

thi

588, 590.

,

VIII.,

garrison

investigation

the Prenoh

Loutre abandons, 11;

la

defended,

671

iterd un,

Alrl

ezpedil

Vll., 280,

Boishebert

de

\l

tor

at,

88.

746; where, \

to,

m

\

905.

,

otherwise oalled, Shamoken, 728

;

to

l

threaten, 286; the Indiana oonvej

maroh

be oedi d

to

789.

.,

£.,85; whv io oalled, PortAugusU (Pennsylvania), 303

806; retaken bj the Dnteh,

Bi

B70

vin

Port Arrowalole (Maine), i\

Porl

Che

225 ''."7.

of,

the northwestern

invites

move to the Mississippi, VII., 594 Neyon commandant at, 620 an Indian trading

Indians to

;

;

635

;

667

;

what Indian tribes resort

mouth at,

765

of the Ohio, 693 ;

taking,

reasons

781

why

661

to,

the speediest routes to, 668

;

its

a necessary post,

;

distance from the

Mr. Sinnot's

;

life

endangered

the Indians opposed the English

the English take

;

Mr. post,

possession

of,

786,

where situated, VII., 788; French settlements begun opposite, 817; not advantageously

808, X., 1161;

situated, 974

colonel

;

colonel Croghan

Wilkins commandant

982;

at, of,

lieutenant-

VIII., 185;

de-

serters ordered to be sent to, X., 37;

news from, 128

mentioned, 247

;

;

orders sent

to,

249

Duquesne with reinforcements, 584; Carthy commandant

of,

1091

;

to

;

supply fort

captain

Mac-

M. de Villers comman-

dant at, 1092, 1160; description of, 1162. by building, 859 M. de Lotbiniere built, 890; evacuated and blown up, Fort Chedabouctou, the English plunder, IX., 923. 1031; the English repair, 1035; report of M. de Fort Choueguen, preparations made for attacking, X., 163; Bourlamague on the evacuation of, 1054, 1055 situation of. 202, 915 the siege of, postponed, 313; distance of, from Montreal, 1130. (See Ticonderoga.) the French endeavor to cut off all communication Fort Casimir (Casamir), on the South river, recovered by the with, 402; the Trench open their fire on, 442; capi-

813

;

the engineer

a fortune

;

;

Dutch, I, 5S3, 591; built, 590; surrendered to the Swedes, 601 particulars of the surrender of, 602, ;

29

tulates,

443; description

of,

458

siderable English force at, 1102.

;

razed, 486; a con(See Oswego.)

GENERAL INDEX.

226

Fort Christiana, a party of Catawbas attacked near, V., 490. (See Christianna.) Fort; Christina, built,

leagues from Beversreede,

Dutch, 591

;

name

Indian name of the capitulation

;

599

;

Alrichs

makes

of,

607, 608, 609

a plan of,

15

II.,

;

soldiers desert, 89

belong to the colonie of that city, 206 tification

vice-director

;

Amsterdam, 198

to be surrendered to the city of

Dutch

the

;

occupied by, 598; the Indians convey

land

site of,

Dutch the land between, Boomtjeshook and,

to the ibid

361; reduced by the

I.,

of the creek adjoining, 596

Swedes purchased the

'

seven

291, 590, 596, III., 343;

I.,

;

the

;

to

196

William Johnson endeavors

sir

;

Indians scattered around, 247

Belestre taken prisoner near, 282

209

Delaware deterred from Beaver creek from, 287

286

visiting,

the Cher-

;

281

ensign

;

state of, ibid

;

a party of Cherokees on

;

their way to, 324; reduced, 314, 352, X., 905; its name changed, VII., 352 major Grant defeated near, ;

;

the English requested to occupy the a Shawanese settlement near, 752

site

York), VI., 397;

han serves in the expedition against, 982 captain William Crawford of Virginia in the expedition against, VIII., 464; the 77th highlanders at the re-

himself

distinguishes

Clinton

at,

duction

563

of,

the English erect a storehouse within

;

ten leagues of, X., 261;

captain Contreeceur

de Ruyter ordered to retake, 289

262; admiproposed to be

II., ;

given to England, 352.

condition in 1755, 300;

its

commandant

303; the Eng-

of,

lish defeated near, 303, 310, 884, 888, 902; threat-

ened, 305, 307

Stobo

of,

plan

;

draws

370

from,

making

preparations

;

311, 1025;

of,

Niagara

to

France, ibid

of, sent to

plan

a

sent

artillery

Fort Coulonge, besieged by the Iroquois, IX., 595; where

326

descriptions

new

for a

captain

:

the English ;

expedition

situate, ibid.

against, 380, 583, 762, 834, 835, 852

Fort Craven, X., 827.

commandant

(Illinois), erected, HI.,

580

M. de

;

la Salle

398

IX., 381.

396

of,

general Brad-

;

dock dismisses the Indians at, VII., 271 news from, 281 a French party sent to reconnoitre, 282 Robert Wilson taken prisoner at, 382 colonel Stephen at,

416

;

;

406 ; prisoners and M. de Montcalm's opinion of, Illinois,

operations near, 435

;

;

;

to,

396; a number of people killed near, 402; the

;

French and their Indians lay waste the around, 408, 435, 486, 580; location

of,

country

424; sick-

437 ; probable abandonment of, 518 ; the French marauding parties in the neighborhood of, 581 M. de Chevigny killed near, 589 a large force

ness

at,

VII., 635;

Scotia), an Indian trading post, confounded with fort Edward Augustus, ;

;

Fort Cushenoc (Maine), IX., 905. Fort Denonville at the

mouth

of the river Niagara, V., 827,

IX., 909, 984,999.

of,

of, in

1757,

does not succeed well with

English approaching, 834, 835, 852 against, 856

819; the

strength of the

;

abandoned, 905

;

;

burn-

ed, 922, 956, 958, 969; the English rebuild, 1094.

(See Fort Pitt; Pittsburgh.)

Fort Edward, a description of the carrying place

gation ordered respecting,

commander

of,

train, 843, 864.

805

;

;

investi-

M. de Bourgmont,

IX., 800, 809; called fort Pontchar-

(See Detroit.)

VII.,

2; on Hudsons

garrisoned, 27

;

4

;

;

125

sent to,

IV.,

at,

200;

earl

Loudon

of

from

recommended New York

general cation

437

;

Webb

made

in

command

in

tor

Johnson

fort

at,

of,

be

sir

;

march

to

for,

229 at,

to,

208;

170,

drunkenness

;

the 2,'il

;

274, X., 634; appli-

lands between lake George and, VII.,

John H. Lydius attempts site

199

to,

164, 165, 169,

Indians spend their time

to

forces

reinforcements

to obtain a grant of

barracks half-way

456;

between lake

;

of Wills creek from, VI., 957; lieu-

tenant-governor de Lancey's opinion

at,

Albany,

the

scouting parties sent

;

at

George and, 509 brigade-major Skene applies for lands between South bay and, 510; lieutenant-

IX., 383, 384.

recommends

river,

mentioned, 32

stationed between Albany and, 122;

the

VI., 824, 832.

FortDu Quesne, distance

furnished with cannon from the fort

;

Indians set out

908, 909, 928; foundation of, laid, IX., 671

Shirley

commandant

William Johnson and his Indians about

Fort Detroit (Fort de Tret, Fort D'Trett, Fort du Droit), IV.,

Du Luth, Dummer,

the

;

army marching

194

Green bay, 658 fort Eeausejour called, VIII., 250, English force at, 359. X., 358

in

Fort

656

the Indians, 693; supposed to be taken,

;

;

encamped at, 834. Fort Cumberland (Nova

Fort

1756, 466; news from,

at, in

481,528, 670, 841, 843, 855; condition

;

ensign Douville sent on a scout

546

436; force

Illinois at,

from the

a battoe arrives

;

;

;

Dumas

captain

;

abstract of operations near,

;

supplied from the

scalps brought to, 408

Fort Cumberland (Maryland), VI., 957, 973

built, X., 365

of,

George Crog-

;

;

New

ing the king of Fantyn to surprise,

at,

a

;

distance of

;

;

Fort Cormantin (Cormantyn), the Dutch accused of incit-

Fort Crevecoeur

;

of,

to gain over the-

site of,

;

party from,

attack a French

okees

382

806.

ral

to the expedition against, 106

the six nations invited to assist in the reduction

573

Fort Clinton (West Point), stormed, VIII., 717; major-

James

mas Barton chaplain

the

;

mington, Delaivare.) Fort Clinton (Washington county, expedition against, X., 79. general

Delawares settled near, 119, but are a different tribe from those on the Susquehanna, 156 ; reverend Tho-

(See Christina; Wil-

on the west side of the Delaware, 241

erect a fort below, 242.

;

first for-

[For-

of,

991

;

governor

that spies be sent to, VII., 10

;

governor Colden's remarks on petitions for lands east of, 588;

VIII., 382;

course of the

Hudson

river near, 015,

advertisements issued for the settlement

GENERAL

Poi

l.\l)K\

.

of Hi

n mi

tow ards,

betn 'II

round,

\

i

\

1

1

620

,

be »

i

and Indian

i

\

i

o

1 1

~

!

I

desoription

:

oalled

\

fori

In

3

i ,

an attack on, 342;

1

oppose

tola

ti

attaok near

631

to,

818, 837, 945, 946;

M. de Mont-

;

897

borsi

j

be senl

to

a

Lyman-

Fort

irrison left at,

to,

885

Edward Augustus (Green

Fori

Msborgh,

825, 829

Lijdius

Longueuil

.-

861

Fort

La

garrison

of, in

number

on English territory, VIII.,

;

at,

;")07.

X,

ought

es

1746,

no!

36

news

;

at, 86,

to

24s

of,

St.

George.)

ordered of,

Of,

X., 437; where, 582.

to,

an Indian trad-

as

and smiths

interpreters

be sent

to

Hazen commands

Scotia, 973; captain

at,

Ontario, 827

;

fort

on lake a stone

a French

621;

destroyed, VII., 349

major Woodhull in

fort,

227

the

expedition against, VIII., 295;

;

;

advantages, IX., 118, 190; M. de of,

granted,

122;

taken, 379;

147, 794; M. de la Salle governoi of, 158;

Forest major 208,

barks built

169, 171;

of,

M. de

964;

957,

Salle

la

strates against the seizure

sent to, 226, 229

;

213;

of,

chaplains

234;

at,

665;

236,

;

list

war

la

270;

captain Dorvilliers

burnt, ibid

ought the

to

;

him

215

of,

of,

and sent

of,

3S9

;

French galleys, 464;

extinguished

at,

465

at,

391;

several Indian- seized

in 1690, 461, 4S2; to the

mortality

;

its

the

fire

of

reestablishment

recommended, 533; red with blood, 581; about

to

Scotia), reduced, VIII., 250,

a portion of

garrison sent to

its

New York, an

oi

V,

;

the

respecting

crown asked in,

209

;

.

the

to build

stores

state of, in 1756, VII., 164; the

;

lord

of

burned, VI., bin a

governor's

money voted

;

Loudon

passed for

the

miserable condition, 929

suspicions

185;

act

782;

to repair,

barrack burnt,

ought to be kept in good at, 342 government house in, burnt, VIII., 407;

latitude

435

to,

641

of, ;

plan

;

of,

;

state

of the ordnance belonging

altered,

673

plan of

;

the

fort

transmitted to the secretary of state, 691.

Fort George (Oswego), X., 440; capitulates, 443;

273; ;

852;

repair, 984;

341

la

in regard

command

831,

829,

823,

(See Fort Cataraqui.)

Nova

and completing,

in a

196, 197

of,

be a royal post, 292; Iroquois take prisoners

neighborhood

condition

peace

in

at,

184,

at,

price of freight from Montreal to, 289

821,

was surrendered, 825: burnt,

lost in, 937.

house and a chapel

of troops

governor de

it

(See Fcrt William Henry, Lake George.)

finishing

remon-

outlay

his

Iroquois pillage, 230

264; the latter to have justice done

at,

taken,

which

Fort George, in the city

204;

Barre denies having deprived M. de la Salle

in

819; n

Fort George (Maine), V., 598, IX., 575, 905.

216; to be restored to hirn, 223, 233; reinforcements

to,

menaced, conditions

Fort George.

184, 197,

at,

abandons,

particulars respecting, 211; M. de la Salle

at,

;

Quebec, 303; burnt, 547; untenable, 671.

visits,

M. de

432;

an intrenched camp

;

;

X., 314, 3S0, 381;

asks a grant

la Salle

count de Frontenac

123;

its

badly

condition Indian name of, 556 440 M. de Noyan commandant of, 700;

at,

and goods

10.

or Cataraqui, VI., 183,992;

where, V.,

Fort Froatenac,

X., 3

at,

to, 4:34

;

to,

854;

~>6,

Fort Gaspareau (Gasparo,

Fort Frederick Edward, baron de Dieskau taken

312, 313, 348

at,

Montcalm ordered

;

VIII.,

777.

d in the

834; measures adopted to repair, 860; strength of the garrison of, 878 a prodigious quantity of provisions

659; an old place of trade, 661; formerly part of

Nova

153, 164 h


H. de B

;

commands

-

Famine, V., 827.

Fori Ferrania,

Joncaire

mentioned, 969;

951;

commandant

reinforcement,

trade with the Indians forbidden

M.

880;

into,

an

;

d'Arnaud

tettii

bay), VII ,658.

291

I.,

Fort Erie, VII., 862;

at, IX.,

979 1049

i

Fori Elsenburoh,

d

thrown

10

589.

I.,

oaptain

;

supplies

j

(See Fori Lydiui

947.

Nickoisott;

Fort

Fori

ti..

ba

890; James Prevost commandant

prisoners oarried to

....

at,

fresh

:

ordered to reduce, 689, 660; the Frenoh make an

ia,lm

of,

Dieskau

i

B-ie

I

i

\

French

to laj

of,

,

Lydiu

fori

de Montcalm declines

command

in

ith

man, the

1

irii

Hugh Hunro obtains ort at, abandon d,



l?:.:.,

of, In

l.\

be bound

1

728

-,

a grant of on Island op] Vlll.,-);.

anil

I

of

ndred miles beyond, 727

i

omi

,

672

descrip-

tion of, 458, 915.

Fort George's crown, X., 435. Fort

Good Hope.

(See Fort Hope.)

Fort Granville (Grandville, Pennsylvania), built, VII., 197; situation of, X., 469

;

burnt, 4S0, 4S9, 490.

Fort Halifax (Maine), erected, VI., 959

;

an Indian trading

post on Kennebec river, VII., 635, 658, 659, 661; an

expedition authorized against, X., 277.

I

.

GENERAL INDEX.

228

to be a trading post, VII., 973.

(Nova Scotia\

fax

VII.,

-,

341

a

;

man

whit..-

I

181;

at,

107

!-,

wh


tcs,

New

"i



655

friends as

689

Bel

;

16

a

buildi

En

the

Hi" five

make peaoe

693

renonnoed

by

led the

nations to resort

Royal, 769 771

th On

;

;

Btren

their

on their enoroaohmenl

th

ooverj

in

831

lo,

mouth

the

make

;

with

build a fort

at

the five

it

828

good behavior,

1017;

of America,

Canada, 1055

;

design to

104S

1061

to

settlement

number

divers places in

New England,

send an expedition

1120; take an English vessel

1121

;

infest the entrance to

and the American

their privateers, V., 21

32

;

five

New England

outside

Sandyhook,

New York

harbor, 1147,

1148;

coast,

engagement

with

settled at port Royal, 31,

;

sutlers considerably from,

nations must be let loose on, 43

42

;

the

destroy Nevis,

;

ries

bound

to Philadelphia, 61,

render

found to

summon

Oswego,

fort

926, 928, 972, VI., 125, Indians,

the ai

fori

the

northern lakes

V.,

Anne, VI.,

928; 13]

;

th

and the

;

send a force

t

a party of, attacked on lake

;

to the

Ohio, 531, and expel

the western countries, 604, 608, 610, VII., 267; build a fort

among

the Miamis, VI., 706, also on lake Brie

and on the Ohio, 836 841

;

;

reduce a fort at the Monon-

reduce Oswego, VII., 123;

and

explanation

of belts sent to the five nations by, 137; measures

adopted to prevent their being supported from the neutral islands, 162, 163; refuse to give the Indians

any prisoners

capture of

the

after

Oswego, 195

measures of increased vigor about receive supplies

against, 216;

to

;

be adopted

from Rhode Island,

225,226; reduce fort William Henry, 274 destroy the German at war with, 325 ;

56; capture a vessel

war

New

English traders thence, 532; deposit leaden plates in

Northampton;

against

;

at

Lawrence, 143, 151, 152 Erie, 391

cut off Deerfield,

;

i

great efforts to gain the six nations, 908;

into

galiela,

1083

704

western lakes, 743;

attack

;

at

of

-

tl

then

the lands as far as the heads of

all

in

;

take lieutenant-governor Clark prisoner, 1069

1099;

claim

Robert Living-

;

for,

Crown Point, 126; have agents among propose making a settlemi nl

1063 danger from their behind the English plantations, 1068

taken prisoner by,

ston

five

build a fort

prepare an expedition against the

New England,

river,

703;

nations,

the

secure

their

;

the

sea,

make

;

falling

inland parts

eastern parts of

South

on the

917; propose that the Indians remain neutral, 979, 983; in New York, lord Cornbury bears testimony to their

of

I

which

726; activity of, in America, 727; will not allow the English to trade with Indians

872;

about

;

and

a,

probable thai an inland pass

the

trade at Onondage,

Ceenthee, 907;

lacola

i

consti notion

ir

Mains peace

a considerable settle-

erect a fort at Detroit, 891, 900, 905, 90C

P