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English Pages 714 Year 1832
HISTORY OF THE
STATE OF MAINE; FROOI
ITS FIRST DISCOVERY, A. D. 1602,
TO
THE SEPARATION,
By
WILLIAM
IN
A. D. 1820,
D.
TWO
INCLUSIVE.
WILLIAMSON.
VOLUMES.
VOL.
II.
fSlallotDcU:
GLAZIER, MASTERS & CO. 1832.
Entered
according to Act of Congress, in the year
William D. Williamson,
in the Clerk's Office
1
832, by
of the District
Court of Maine.
THIS PRINTING IS A FACSIMILE OF THE 1832 EDITION
This edition published by
The Cumberland Press, Inc. Freeport, Maine 04032 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number:
66-22134
Printed in the United States of America By KJ Printing, Augusta, Maine
CONTENTS OF VOL. A. D. 1691.
1692-3. 1694. 1696.
1697. 1698.
1699.
1700. 1701-2. 1702.
II.
CHAPTER
I. Page 9 to 37. Oct. 7, Provincial Charter of William and Mary granted embracing Massachusetts, New-Plymouth, Maine and Sagadahock. ;
The
first
administration.
Feb. Death of Sir William Phips, first Royal Governor. Nova Scotia conceded by Massachusetts to the British Crown. Distress of Yorkshire. Sept. 11. Treaty of Ryswick. Nova Scotia resigned to France. Villebon, the French Governor, claims westward to Kennebeck. May 26, Lord Bellamont arrives, Provincial Governor. J. Bridges, first surveyor in the King's woods. Resettlement of Maine promoted. A Committee of Claims. Deaths of Lord Bellamont, Lieut. Gov. Stoughton, James II. and William III. Joseph Dudley, Provincial Governor. Population in Maine.
CHAPTER 1703.
Queen Anne's war.
1711-12.
The war.
1712. 1713.
March
II.
p.
38—79.
The French draw
the broken tribes to St. Francois. Several eastern towns attacked by the Indians. Church's 5th eastern expedition. Colonial sufferers in this war. 1704. The Indians consider the war a burthen. 1706. All the remaining eastern settlements assailed. 1707. 1709-10. Expeditions against Port-Royal. Nova Scotia subdued by Col.
Nicholson
—
an event important to Maine and Sagadahock. Last skirmish at Wells. ;
Oct. 27, Hostilities cease. and July 11, of Portsmouth. No30, Treaty of Utrecht va Scotia resigned to England and made a British Province. Castine the younger. ;
CHAPTER
80—
1714.
110. III. p. administration and prudentials of Maine. Three towns survive the war. Ecclesiastical affairs. Order for the resettlement of several towns. Five towns revived. Paper money floods the country. Samuel
1715.
A
1713.
The
1716.
Shute commissioned Governor. road ordered from Berwick to Pejepscot. Three townships projected in the Pejepscot purchase. Georgetown resettled. Settlement of Kennebeck attempted. Yorkshire extended to
1717.
Treaty with the Indians confirmed at Arrowsick.
St.
Croix.
Timber
trees
protected. 1718. 1719. 1720.
1721.
1722.
Armstrong's project to settle Sagadahock. Settlements between Kennebeck and St. Georges revived. Fort Richmond built. The Governor and House differ. Coram's project to settle Sagadahock. Affairs of Nova Scotia. Rale's character and conduct. Notaries Public. P. Dudley's case as a Councillor. Mast trees protected. The Indians denounced as rebels. Castine the younger seized. Rale escapes. North- Yarmouth resettled.
CHAPTER Lovewell's war.
The
first
IV. p. 111—151. reprizals and attacks by the Indians.
Brunswick burnt. July 25, war proclaimed. Events of the Part of Georgetown burnt. Old town destroyed by Col. Westbrook. Attacks of the Indians. war.
1723. 1724.
Col. Moulton's attempt to take Ral^.
Norridgewock taken and Raid
killed.
1622210
Successes of the Indians. Lovewell's excursions.
CONTENTS.
iv
A. D. 1725.
battle of Pegwacket. The Indian village at Fort Hill destroyed. Dummer's treaty, Dec. 15, at Boston. Its ratificaSagamores' sentiments, tion.
The
CHAPTER
V. p. 152—178. administration. Three trading houses established. back tier of mission sent to recover captives. Earthquake. towns proposed. July 13, Governor Burnet arrives. Councillors. His disputes Death. w'ith the House. David Dunbar, surveyor of Political changes in Sagadahock. the woods, takes possession of that Province rebuilds the fort
Dummer's 1727. 1728.
1729.
A
A
;
1732-3.
Pemaquid and surveys lots. Gov. Belcher's administration commences. Officers Complaints against Dunbar. He is appointed shire. of New-Hampshire, His removal effected.
1733. 1734. 1735.
CHAPTER VI. p. 179—193. Terms on which new townships were granted. Grants made. Paper money overflows the country. Salary question put to rest. Falmouth made half-shire with York. County officers. A new
at
1730.
valuation finished.
Census.
in YorkLt. Gov.
Throat-distemper rages.
1737.
Trade extended. Right to the woods discussed. Natives complain of encroachments by Mr. Waldo. Dormant claims revived. Great dearth of provisions.
1737-8.
Dispute with New-Hampshire as
1739.
William Pepperell and Samuel Waldo command the two York-
1740.
News
1736.
CHAPTER
VII.
p.
to dividing
194—214.
lines, referred, dis-
cussed, settled. shire regiments. of the Spanish dissolved.
formed 1741.
1742. 1743.
—
war
received.
First instance of impressment. Ship-building, trade and fisheries flourish. New valuation. Fears ®f war and measures of defence.
CHAPTER 1744.
1745.
The Spanish war.
The French
1747.
;
Land-bank
and appointment of
New
tenor
bills issued.
Settlements promoted.
p. 215—233. join against' England. War de-
VIII.
clared against the Indians, from Passamaquoddy eastward. LouEight eastern scouts. Defensible men in Maine, 2,855. isbourg described. Expedition against it. The officers, the fleet, and the army. Assistance of a British Ijouisbourg capitulates. Its great squadron. The siege. strength. Expenses of the expedition repaid by Great Britain.
CHAPTER 1746.
Specie scarce.
Governor Belcher removed from office Governor Shirley. George VVhitefield.
IX.
p.
234—259.
Fifth Indian war. A defensive force of 450 men raised. Depredations by the savages. French fleet of 70 sail, under Duke d'Anville, arrives at Halifax. Its disasters, A force of 470 men from this Province capitulates at Minas. A naval victory achieved by two English Admirals, Anson and Warren. Defence of the eastern people provided. News of
A
peace arrives. 1748. 1749.
Oct. Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelie. In this war, the Province lost 3,000 effective men. Treaty with the eastern tribes at Falmouth.
CHAPTER
X.
p.
260—273.
1749-60. Claim of the French westward to Kennebeck. Governor Shirley goes a Commissioner to Paris, on the subject of boundaries, Monej' due received from England, aod the paper money all
V
CONTENTS.
1750.
redeemed. The French Neutrals join the troops from Canada Halifax settled. at the Isthmus of Nova Scotia. Cornwallis attacks the French helow the Isthmus. The homicide of Albee and accomplices, at VViscasset. The Indians from the north,
1751.
commit
mischief.
August, Treaty with
tlte
Natives confirmed.
CHAPTER
1750-2.
XI. p. 274—303. The people — conspicuous for their merits, and tolerant in their sentiments. The ministry of the g-ospel is able and pious. The British American system enforced, by acts of Parliament. Settlement of the eastern country encourag-ed.
1752. 1753.
1754.
Petition for a new County. valuation. New Style adopted. Indians disturbed by encroachments, and by fires in the woods. Obstacles to settlement were the fears of savag-e hosVassal's project. tilities and the question as to land-titles. The claims of the Eng-lish and Governor Shirley's return. French to the eastern country specified. French line of northern forts, and aggressions, Defensive measures enlarged. General Union of the colonies Measures of projected. Fort Halifax at Kennebeck erected. defence. War inevitable.
New The
CHAPTER
XII. French war and 6th Indian war. The French 1755.
1756.
1757. 1758.
1759.
1760.
304— 345
p. forts built.
The
eastern fortifications. Four expeditions against the French, three being unsuccessful. The French driven from Nova Scotia, and the French NeuWar declared against all the eastern tribes, trals removed. The people jealous. Cargill's affair except the Tarratines. War upon the Tarratines. An Earthquake. Four expeditions against the French. Public burthens great. War declared against France. Governor Shiriey leaves the Province. The Indians attack the eastern towns and settlements. The expeditions all unsuccessful. The Indian war. Governor Pownal arrives. William Pitt put at the head of the British ministry. Three expeditions all crowned with success Louisbourg and other places taken. The last efforts of the Indians against the English, at St. Georges. A general attack upon the French. General Wolfe proceeds against Quebec. A fortress built at Penobscot, and named Fort Pownal. Death of General Waldo. Sept. 13, Quebec capitulates. Major Rogers destroys the Indian village of St. Francois. Death of Generals Pepperell and Waldo. Peace with the eastern tribes. Canada finally conquered.
—
—
—
CHAPTER
1761.
1762.
XIII. p. 346— 36S. Limits of the, Eastern Patents and great Tracts reviewed. Gov. Pownal leares the Province. Members of the Council for the last 30 years. Cumberland and Lincoln Counties established. Francis Bernard arrives. Provincial Governor. George III. New valuation completed. Political parties noticed. Disputes between the Governor and House. York bridge erected. Twelve townships granted at Union river. Line between Maine and Nova Scotia, considered. Drought, fires and scarcity.
Three new towns established. Canada, resigned 10, Treaty of Paris, Quebec Province established.
1763.
Feb.
1763. 1764. 1765. 1766. 1767.
Measures
—
CHAPTER to raise a
revenue
in
XIV.
to
Great
Britain.
pr 369— 407.
America.
Governor's view of the eastern tribes. Census of Maine. Jan. 10, Stamp-act passed. The first Continental Congress, Stamp-act repealed. Crown lands and timber, considered. A Hurricane. Parliament lay duties on tea, glass, paper, &c. and regulate salaries.
CONTENTS.
vi
A. D. 1768. 1769. 1770. 1771.
1773.
1774.
A
Colonial circulars offend the British ministry. Provincial Convention. British troops stationed in Boston. Gov. Bernard leaves the Province. Duties repealed, except on teas. Boston Massacre. Public lands and mechanical arts, ingreat repute. Thomas Hutchinson commissioned Governor. He opposes the settlements in Sag-adahock. They increase on the Kennebeck. Governor disputes with the House. Judg-es' salaries. About 300 families leave Waldoborough. Symptoms of revolution noticed. Ministers and lawyers opposed to British taxation. The dispute well understood b}' the parties. Dec. 16, Teas destroyed in Boston.
CHAPTER 1774.
1775.
XV.
p.
409—420.
Acts passed by Parliament, to close the port of Boston, alter the charter of Massachusetts, and make other chang-es. Gen. Gag-e appointed Governor. He dissolves the General Court. A Provincial Cong-ress meets. Second Continental Congress convenes. County Conventions. Committees of Safety and Supplies. Affairs of Coulson and Mowett. April 19. Battle of Lexington. Gen. Gage denounced.
CHAPTER
XVI.
p.
421—448.
The war
1776.
of the Revolution commenced. Capt. Mowett seized at Falmouth. First Bills of Continental money issued. George Washington commands the American Army. June 17th, Bunker Hill battle. Eastern affairs. Provincial charter resumed. Members of the Assemblies. Massachusetts issues paper-money. Falmouth burnt by Mowett. Arnold's expedition through Kennebeck to Quebec. Repulse. General Post-oflBce established. New appointment of Civil officers. Militia reorganized. Defence of Maine. Declaration of Independence.
CHAPTER
XVII.
p.
449—485.
The amity 1777. 1778.
1779.
1780.
of the eastern Indians confirmed. Measures of defence. Eddy's retreat to Machias. A Continental Army raised. Firearms arrive from France. Battle ol Trenton. A garrison established at Machias. The enemy there repulsed. Capture of Gen. Burgoyne's army. New Constitution rejected. Estates of Absentees confiscated. Paper*money depreciated, 30 to one. Arrival of a French fleet. Maine and Sagadahock formed into a District. The British seize upon Penobscot and occupy 'Biguyduce. The American fleet and troops sent to remove the enemy defeated. The losses. Saltonstall cashiered. 600 men raised for the eastern service. Troubles in Maine Gen. Wadsworlh commands the Eastern Department. Arnold's treason. Constitution of the Commonwealth adopted. Members of the Council for the past 20 years.
—
:
—
CHAPTER
XVIII.
p.
486—605.
1782.
Administration under the State-constitution. Gen. Wadsworth carried a prisoner to 'Biguyduce. Maj. Barton made prisoner They escape. Defence of the eastern inhabitants. Gen. also. McCobb succeeds to the command of Gen. Wadsworth. PubFirst Commissioners lic credit low, and public burdens great. of Eastern Lands. October 27, surrender of Cornwallis and his army. Cessation of hostilities. Judicial and militia systems new modelled,
1783.
Sept. 3.
1781.
banded.
Definitive treaty of Paris. Losses.
CHAPTER 1784.
XIX.
The American army p.
dis-
506—520.
Great and immediate increase of settlements and population in Maine. Committees of Eastern Lands appointed. Lumber and other articles of export. Disputes between the borderers on the river St. Croix.
CONTENTS.
1785.
Body of
Expenses of the Penobscot expeGovernor Hancock resig-ns, and J. Bowdoin Demand for eastern lands. Twelve town-
Statiitc-lav/ revised.
dition considered.
elected Governor. Provision ships confirmed. Treaty with the Tarratines.
Great
vii
made for quieting- the Islanders. Towns and plantations revived.
freshet.
CHAPTER XX. 1785-6.
1787. 1788.
1789.
1791-2. 1793.
Land lottery instituted. surrection. re-elected Gov. Economy and industry enccurag-ed. Federal Constitution adopted. First Representatives to Congress, Colleg-e in Maine projectand Electors. Slavery abolished. Twenty new towns. ed. first President of the Washington, U. States, inaugurated. Georg-e
A
XXI.
548—557.
p.
Counties of Hancock and Washington established. Maine a DisA Census taken. Officers of the District Court. District. putes between the eastern borderers and British provincials quieted. A law to preserve game. Nine new towns. Objects of eastern enterprize. Death of Governor Hancock. Two new towns incorporated.
CHAPTER 1794.
Falmouth Result of Shay's in-
Hancock
CHAPTER 1790.
521—547.
p.
Separation of Maine, from Massachusetts, discussed. Gazette, first published. Address to the people. measures taken for Separation. Three new towns.
XXII.
p.
558—586.
The French
Political parties— Federalists and Anti-federalists. Mr. revolution. The Americans take sides.
Jay's treaty.
1794-5.
Samuel Adams elected Governor. Three Representatives to Congress elected. Bowdoin College established. Nineteen new towns incorporated. 3,500,000 acres of eastern
1795.
Emigrant Society formed.
lands sold since the peace. lars
1796.
1797.
1798.
1799.
and cents, adopted
in
Metalic coins regulated computation.
— eagles, dol-
Law as to Shell-fish. By a treaty Militia Division formed. with the Tarratines, 9 townships relinquished by them. Seven Academies endowed. new towns. Records of Supreme Judicial Court removed from Boston to their 1. Sumner elected Governor. respective counties. Parties. Federalist and Democrat, J. Adams and T. Jefierson, President and Vice-President. French aggression. Five new towns. The true St. Croix determined. Eight new towns. War measures Land-tax, sedition law and alien bill. Envoys to France, Truxton's victory. Kennebeck County established. The Plymonth, Waldo and Pejepscot patents limited. Deaths of Gov. Sumner and Gen. Washington.
A 3d
—
CHAPTER The Supreme Judiciary
XXIII.
p.
587—604.
1803.
Caleb Strong elected GovElectors of President and Vice-President chosen. Opposition of the Democrats to the measures of the National administration. Treaty negociated with France. The Federal Eagle C. Bench of 16 Judges established. T. a badge. Jefferson and A. Burr, President and Vice-President. 2d census. A new valuation. Six new towns. J. Read and P. Coffin, Land-agents. Sales of the eastern lands considered. The Federalists oppose the new administration. of Congressional Acts— Other measures adopted. MeRepeals rino sheep imported. New towns. Banks increased, and the banking system revised. Law against
1804-5.
counterfeiting. Judiciary improved
1800.
revised.
ernor.
—
A
1801.
1802.
1805. 1806.
—
and a Nisi-prius system adopted. Fisheries. Oxford County established. The era of incorporations. Though Governor Strong was re-elected, each legislative branch
CONTENTS.
viii
A. D,
The British insult our flag-. Non-importaBerlin and Milan decrees. British impressments. Embargo laid. Twenty-four new towns incorporated. was democratical.
Act
lion
1807.
passed.
CHAPTER XXIV. J. Sullivan elected
p.
—
Governor.
605—627.
i8oa.
His administration County-Attorneys, Courts of Sessions and Jury act. Betterment Law. A 4th militia division. Sullivan's death. Six-
1809.
C.
J807.
teen
new
towns.
Gore elected Governor. administration.
Gore's
Somerset County established. Mr. Madison, President of the United Rambouillet Decree. The
J.
Erskine's arrangement. States. Vaccination affair of Chadwick. Society established. 1810.
E. Gerry elected Governor.
1811.
valuation, and fishery. Religious freedom-bill. tion.
recommended,
The 3d Census.
Maine Bible
Exports, tonnage,
Measures of Mr. Gerry's administraSkirmish between the Little Belt and the President.
Two new
militia divisions established.
1812.
Mr. Strong re-elected Governor. Tax on banks. Corporeal punishment abolished. Land controversies in Lincoln settled.
1812.
The European belligerents. Embargo, and measures of defence. June 18, war declared against G. Britain. Events of the war.
1813.
Politics.
CHAPTER XXV. ties.
New towns and Banks. Direct tax imposed.
p.
628—638.
Washington Benevolent Socie-
1814.
March, all restrictive laws repealed. American successes in the war.
1814.
The war
Factories established.
CHAPTER XXVI.
p.
639—657.
Maine. The enemy seize upon Eastport, Castine, and Machias. The government instituted there by the British. Their other measures. Trade at Castine and Hampden. Closing events and incidents of the war. Battle of N. Orleans. Measures of the Hartford Convention. Castine and the eastern coast evacuated by the British, as far eastwardly as Eastport. in
CHAPTER
XXVII.
p.
658—679.
Feb. 11, news of peace arrives. Trade and Commerce. The condition of the cod-fishery. Public morals. New towns. County of Penobscot incorporated. A land office 1816. established. J. Brooks elected Governor. Measures resumed Brunswick Convento separate Maine from Massachusetts. tion. Parties, Emigration westward. Cold Seasons. Emigrations partiallv checked. Moose Island 1817. decided to belong to Maine. Our northern boundary discussed. Treaty with the Tarratines. Probate Code revised. Sea-Serpent. 1S18. Its Constitution framed 1819-20. Maine separated from Massachusetts. and adopted. It is admitted into tlie Union. Its political ad1815.
ministration.
SUPPLEMENTAL.— CHAPTER 1623 to 1820.
XXVIII.
p.
680—705.
Expenditure and our history. The Militia. revenue. Taxation. Coins. Education, arts, studies and professions. The religious denominations and their ecclesiastical Industry, trade and manufactures. The various instipolity. Domestic life reviewed. tutions, established.
The
periods -of
APPENDIX. Page 707. No. 1.— List of Councillors under the Provincial Charter. 708. List of Councillors and Senators, under the Constitution. 2. 709. List of Members of Congress from Maine. 3. 4. The Rulers and Governors of Maine from its first settlement. 710. 712. 5. —List of Counties and corporate towns.
— —
—
HISTORY OF MAINE CHAPTER Provincial Charter ture
L
— Governor and other Public
Officers
— Lcgisla-
— Council— House oj Representatives — Voters — Statute enact-
ments
—Judicial Courts— Justices — Militia— Ecclesiastical
Crown
—
of the Peace Appeals to the Education Land-titles
affairs
—
—
—Rights— Laws—Crimes and PunishmentS'^Witchcraft'^Death —
of Gov. Phips NelsoUy Governor of Nova Scotia^ seized by Vil" Massachusetts resigns the Govern^ Icbon, the French Governor
—
Crown of England— Her measures — Restrictive acts of Parliament—Board of Plantations — Treaty of Ryswick — Nova Scotia French — They and Massachusetts both claim Saga-
ment of that Province protective of
Trade and signed
to the
Maine
re*
to the
dahock^-Conduct of
Villebon,
the
French Governor—'Dispute
about the jurisdiction of Sagadahock^I^ord Bellamont succeeds Governor Phips His Speech John Bridges, Survey or-^Gnreral
of
the
— — woods The
—
Claims
— Fears
—Rumors of war and — Committee of
eastern towns revived
— Great Island of war — Deaths of
measures of defence
to be fortified
Lord Bellamont, William
Stoughton, James IT. and William III.
^Governor Dudley at Casco
The
succeeds
—Measures of —Meets
Lord Bellamont
— The conference and
the
French
the Indiana
its incidents^
celebrated Charter of William and Mary, dated
ber 7th, 1691, was brought hither from England by Sir
LiAM Phips, the
first
.
D. 1692.
Wil- ^"^^^(prof
royal Governor, and went into operation ^^^^"^
on the 14th of May, 1692. ibis State, in
Octo- a
two great
It
divisions
embraced the whole ;
—
territory of
one, extending from Piscata-
qua to Kennebeck, was called the Province of Maine} the other, Maine including all between Kennebeck and the St. Croix, was usually
denominated Sagadahock*^
—As
;
II.
2
and
J;^^^**'"'
the political connexion between
See Utvol. chap. xxii. A. D. 16»1.-— Though Nora Scotia was embraced; Massachusetts resigned the government of it to the crown, A. D. 1696, about a year before the peace and it became a British Province. The
Vol.
^
—
THE HISTORY
10 A. D. 1692.
[VoL.
Massachusetts proper and the present State of Maine continued about 130 years
;
it
becomes important
TheExccii-
Its features
and
its
to give a general outline
new
of the Province government under the ^^^*
II.
Charter.
bore a resemblance to the government of England,
departments were nearly as
The Governor,
distinct.
Lieutenant-Governor and Secretary of State were appointed and
commissioned by the crown,
—
to hold their respective offices
The two
ing their sovereign's pleasure.
took their oaths before each other
;
—
officers
first
afterwards, they
dur-
primarily
and the
Secretary, also other officers, were severally sworn by two of the
Council. The Gov-
The Governor was
truor.
chief magistrate^ and invested with supreme
He
executive authority.
had power
convene, adjourn, and
to
even dissolve the Legislature, and to nominate, and with advice of Council, appoint
and other
officers
civil
judges, sheriffs, justices of the peace,
all
;
—
their
days upon a nomination-book. given jurisdiction of
by warrant from monies.
all
names being
To him
probate matters, and the right of drawing
the Provincial treasury,
appropriated public
all
As Captain- General, he was empowered
the militia, and appoint and commission to erect
placed seven
first
and the Council, was
and demolish
fortifications
;
to organize
military officers
all
—but
;
also
he could not march
any inhabitant out of the Province without
his
own
that of the Legislature previously obtained.
He
could negative as
many
as thirteen of the Councillors chosen, and also the
of the
House,
often exercised
if
they were displeasing to him
by him
in
addressed by him
in
a speech
;
in
;
—
He
Legislative
were usually
the spring,
at other sessions, his
were by written message.
Speaker
a prerogative
The two
high party-times.
branches, after organizing themselves
tions
consent, or
communica-
presided at the Council-
board,* and no law or order passed by the two houses, or by either, Lieui.Gov-
was
valid
till
approved by him.
The Lieutenant-Governor when
the chief magistrate
always
was absent
the executive chair,
filled ;
but at other times, during
a series of years, he sat and voted with the Council. charter aUo included the live northerly Isles of Shoals, as embraced in Gorges' charter viz. Hog Island— Hay ley' or Smutty-nose Island Duck,
—
:
Cedar^ and
He
Malaga Islands.— See
1st vol.
chap.
vi.
A. D. 1639.
in
both
2 Hutchinson's History,
Councillors negatived^ were not
filled
that year.
p.
—
thoHgh Lord 107,—The places of
presided during executive, not legislative debates
Bellamont did
;
1
ChaP.
The
OF MAINE.
I.]
1
Legislative power was vested in two distinct branches IT.,
1
1 he
each having; a negative upon the other.
members
By
;
—
House was consisting of 28
Board of Assistants, was the House of Representatives. three of the Council were always to be or
Council^
called the
—
'^93. .j.^^^
laiure.
the other
the charter,
j^e Coun-
—
from the Province of Maine, and one from Sagadahock ; who must at the time, " be inhabitants or proprietors of land within
"the
A. D. i692
TT
ujpper
territory,"
which they were
whole number of Councillors were, the charter,
who were
May, 1693.
Those
and Samuel
Heyman
in ;
chosen at
first,
by name inserted
hold their places
to
Maine were and
for
The
represent.
to
the
till
Jol) Alcot,'^
cii.
election
in in
Samuel DonnelLf
Sagadahock, Sylvanus Davis.
Mr. Alcot and Mr. Donnell both resided
York, and both
at
of them were afterwards sometime Justices of the Inferior Court
Common
or
Pleas.
—Mr.
Alcot was one of the ancient, most
commander
of the militia
company twenty years before
theless, being somewhat advanced into the Council.
TT
He
1
in the
House.
in
1
Berwick, received
to
life,
or to his short residence
have been a
member
term expired, nor to have
Mr. Davis was
He
filled
a gentleman of
owing proba-
yet,
Maine, he
is
not
any other public
:
and
fidelity. Davis.
superintending
in
Lake upon
Maine.
office in
that Island
and
he acquired an eminent character for integrity,
business, and prudence. to
;
in
interest in Heyman.
distinguish-
good capacity and great
had been an inhabitant of Arrowsick
removed
town two years
of the Board after his charter-
the interests and affairs of Clark and in the vicinity,
Donnell.
•
mark of
this
ed respect on account of his personal worth
known
]
1
also represented his
Mr. Heyman, having an oversight and
alTairs, at
bly to his short
never-
;
years he was never rechosen
But Mr. Donnell was elected the next year
and once subsequently.
the public
Falmouth.
When that Island was No other man was more
waste, he
laid
thoroughly ac-
quainted with this eastern country,f or with the Indians, and while
a prisoner at Quebec, his reputation spect.
He was
commanded
particular re-
a worthy magistrate, and the next year,
was
elect-
ed a member of the Council.
To
fill
the places of Messrs. Alcot and
Heyman
* Written, or spelt sometimes, « Alcock," and sometimes
*Dte
^i^^,
and wealthy inhabitants of his town, and had been
substantial
— the burning of York, 1692.
at the
»'
Coun-
Alcot."
f Sulliran, p. 890.
—See
THE HISTORY
12 A. 15^2^692 cil-board, Messrs,
j
Council, and
Hook,
Hook and
Francis
1693,
in
They had been
elected. /-i m
[VoL. Charles Frost
members of President
were two of the most popular and
the Province of Maine.
wriffhi,
and
mon
j^yiiiie,
-j,
,
rleas, they
In i
i
the
useful
t
i
were both Judges
years Judge of Probate.
Hook was two The
and Mr,
;
In 1694, they were
men in Com-
Court, or
Inferior
first
were
Danforth's
Frost vviieei-
II.
re-elected.
game year, the places of Mr. Donnell and Mr. Davis were filled by Mr, Samuel Wheelwright, of Wells, son of the Rev. John Wheelwright,
town
tlie
original
and principal proprietary
of that
settler
and by Mr. Joseph hynde, who was a non-resident proprie^
;
Boston and was rep-^
Council by a non-resident landholder, with a
the
in
lived in
Indeed, the Sagadahock territory was
Province treasurer, resented
He
within Sagadahock.
tor of lands,
few exceptions, through a period of sixty or seventy years.
When made
The
Annun! IilrCoiIi)%.
elected, and before taking the qualifying oath,
Council were annually chosen on the day of the general
election in
May, by
the
members of
Board and the new
the old
House of Representatives, assembled
convention
in
vacancies happened, during the political year, the
filled in
ed
a
he usually
Board, that he was such proprietor,
affidavit at the
same way by the two branches
quorum
for transacting business
;
the
and
;
they
united,
if
^even form-*
Board being both
ordinate branch of the General Court, and an advisatory cil
Nay, when
of the Governor.
the offices of
ernor and Lieutenant-Governor were vacant,
all
a CO'^
Coun-
Gov^
both the
acts of executive
power were exercised by a majority of the whole Council
many
there have been
when commissions were House of
fpjjg
Olives.
instances,
;
and
especially in the Revolution,
signed by fifteen Councillors.
other branch of the General Court, called the House,
constituted of deputies, or representatives elected
corporate.
May
any
might be
Governor Phips, for the
first
20, 1692, unto every town, to choose
by towns-
time, issued warrants,
Uwo
and no more;'
and appointed a session on the 8th qf June, when 153* were Member» f.om Maine.
returned.
In this Legislature, eight appeared from
Maine ;
Kittery,
YqpI^^ Wells, and the Isles of Shoals, [Appledore,] severally re-
Subsequent
turning two representatives. f • That
is
to say, ffQ
25; Hampshire 12
;
m
how-
to the first year,
Plymouth 12; Essex 30; Middlesex 35 Suffolk Bristol 16 Martha's Vineyard 2 Nan;
Barnstable 11
;
;
;
tucket 2; and Maine S ;=153.
fin
1692, from Kitltty^
James Emery and Benjamin Hodsdon
;
fronj
Chap,
of malne.
i.]
were never represented
ever, those Isles
nor did any town
the
in
General Court
for sixty years, return
;
towns were always represented, during that period,
except
its
in
1697
more than
time,
to the
though the whole delegation from
;
single year,
number
member
a single
in
the
never exceeded
House
this
or eleven.*
ten
for the first ten years,
a. d»^ig92
at
Some
of
any
in
Maine, afterwards,
House.
same
th6
13
Province, in
The
entire
was usually between
60 and 80; never till 1735, exceeding 100 members. Forty a quorum for doing business ; and every one was
constituted
compensation of 3s. for his attendance, but was
entitled to a daily
finable 5s. if absent a
To
day without leave.
be entitled to the right of suffrage, a
of age,
own an
£40
worth
estate,
of their respective
might return two 40, one, or at pleasure
in :
;
—40
the
—having
less than
all
the
first
[-[Jj^"*^"^*'
leg-
name and
30 and
less
than
might elect one or none
voters,
it
might unite with the
of a representative. full
power
to
establish
manner of wholesome and reasonaand orders, not repugnant
to
those
settle annually, all civil officers,
whose
ble laws, statutes, ordinances ^to
In
every town having 120
;
Court, was given
General
—
30
in the election
with or without penalties,
of England,
voters
and upwards, one
the latter case the town
next adjoining town
To
shillings.
.^"[o of^"*^
of representation by towns was graduated to
islature, the ratio
number
years
sterling, or a freehold, which
would yield an annual income of 40
the
man must be 21
Powm or coun.
appointment was not otherwise prescribed,— and to levy taxes needful for the support of government, and the protection of the people. to
But
all
" orders, laws, statutes and ordinances'*^ were Laws
be transmitted by the
first
opportunity after enactment, to the by
king for his approval, under the royal signature. f
If,
however,
Torfc, Jeremiah MoultoQ and M. Turfrey from Wells, Eliab Hutchinson and John Wheelwrig-ht and from the Isles of Shoals, Roger Kelley and William Lakeman. In 1693, from Kitlery, James Emery. In 1694, from the same town, William Screven; and from York and Wells united, Eze;
;
kiel
Rogers, Jr.
Shapleigh,
In 1G95, from Kiltery,
In 1697,
.
James Emery, and
in
1696,
John
In IfiSG, frpn) Kiltery, Richard Cults, and
from Yorki Abraham Preble. * The non-rresident act was passed
in 1694, by which no man might " serre House for any town, unless where he did at that time live and dwell."— 2 Hutch. Hist. p. 78. f Hence these were denominated the StattUes of the reigning monarch ivho approved them, as * the StattUes of William and JUary ;* * AnnCj SfC* *'
in the
to
be
Ujc king,
[VoL.
THE HISTORY
14 A- i>.^jG92
any one of them were not expressly disallowed by him council, within
years, from the day
three
had, after that period,
it
full
and
force
Manifest inconveniences attended
effects.
were taken
bills
render the
enacted
greatly prevented.
perfect
bills to
the other for concurrence,
formerly,
;
—
in
pains
besides,
a
times,
later
General Court soon
In legislation, the
became more parliamentary than
requirement,
For great
needless multiplication of them, so reprehensible
was
privy
by lapse of time.
effect
though not without some beneficial to
.
reached the Board,
it
process and
this
in
II
— each house
amendment
sending
How-
or rejection.
ever, to avoid transmitting every minor legislative measure across Resolves,
the Atlantic, the General Court often acted by " Resolves in this
way, introduced an anomaly
into
legislation,
still
and exten-
sively practiced, though the reason has long since ceased.
TKe
rpj^g
Judici-
General Court, being authorized by charier
of Justice,
for the trial
of
cases,
all
to erect
criminal and
civil,
within the Province, immediately effected a thorough
the judiciary department.
ments provided tribunals
;
a
Some
for the erection
Supreme Court,
and Justice's Courts
;
—and
of the
first
arising
revision
legislative
and establishment of
Common
Courts
of
enact-
five judicial
Pleas, Quarter Sessions,
afterwards. Probate, Chancery, and
Admiralty Courts, The SuCouru
1 *
.
The
Superior Courf^ consisted of one Chief Justice and four
puisne,' or Side Judges,
It
was a
—any
whom formed
three of
tribunal of law and justice in
all civil
a
quorum.
and criminal cases,
through the Province, and of assize and general gaol-delivery in
each county.
by the crown, its
But till
the statute
establishing
it,
was not approved
three years had nearly elapsed,
passage by the General Court
;
subsequent to
so that none of the judges,
except the chief justice, was permanently commissioned, nor before Governor Phips' return to England.
till
1695,
In the meantime,
the jurisdictional powers of this tribunal were exercised by special
commissions of Oyer and Terminer,* one of which,
was issued by the Governor, June 2d, after the statute took effect,
it
1
was found
not to be sufficiently broad and explicit
for instance,
692, to try witches.
;
in its practical
But
operation
and another was passed
was filled with Lieut. Gov. Stoughton, Major Major Richards, Major B. Gedney, Mr. Wait Winthrop, Capt. Samuel Sewall, and Mr. Sargent. 1 Doug. Summ. p. 450.
One
special commission
Saltonstall,
—
Chap, in
a jurisdiction of
1699, which gave to the Court
and criminal,
civil
15
of maine.
i.]
—
matters, A. D.^j692
all
including appeals from the lower courts, re-
views and writs of error, as
fully to
every intent, as the courts of
common pleas and exchequer had within the kingEngland. The judges were appointed in 1695,* and
king's bench,
dom
of
June
held terms in most of the counties, twice in every year.
was the month the shire town,
for the sessions of the
till
Court
in
Yorkshire
the close of the present Indian war,
and
;
was Kit-
—subsequently York.
tery
in
" Inferior Court,^^ or
An
2.
[Common
Pleas] was established
pfeTs?°"
who had cognizance of *' triable at the common
each county, consisting of four Judges,
all civil
actions, arising within its limits,
law."
The
statute
Court was
fconstituting this
The
1699, but not essentially altered.
commissioned
now more commonly
Yorkshire,
in
also revised in
bench of Judges,
first
called
*
the
were Job Alcot,' Francis Hook, Charles Frost county of York,' ' '
^
and Samuel Wheelwright.
The
terms
in this
The
high sheriff was Joseph Curtis,
county, were holden at York, on the
days of April and July
;
and
Wells on the
at
Court, to the next Superior Court
The Court
first
the
sitting in
The Chief
oi
this
same county.
at ^j^g
Justice was Williani Siovghton, born at Dorchester, A.
D.
graduated at Harvard Colleg-e 1650, and was appointed the first Lieut. Governor under the charter of William and Mary. Though he was 1632,
in the executive chair alter
Governor Phips
left
it,
he was appointed
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court in 1695; which 1700,
when he
died 1702.
—
aj^ain took the chair
Thomas Danforlh,
2.
oflSce he held till on the death of Lord Bellamont. He
late President of
Maine, was a roan of
great probity and stern political virtues— the idol of republicans.
name was
His
not inserted among- the chai ter Councillors, though expressly
desired by the agents. prise
and grief."
He
*•
The people received
held the office of Judge
sha Cook; a physician of Boston.
Hs was
the intelligence with surhis death, 1699.
till
a
— 3. ElU
high liberty man," and a
He was an assistant bench 1702 and died 1715, Samuel Sewall of Newbury, a graduate of Harvard College,
popular leader in the General Court near 40 years. in 1681
;
and appointed Judge
— aged 78. —
4.
1671,
was put
into the special
and Chief Justice, 1718 appointed, 1696
£40
a year,
till
;
Conn-
of York.
of General Quarter Sessions of the peace, was The Quar-
holden by the Justices of the Peace within the county, *1.
the
Tues-
Tuesdays
Appeals lay from the decision of
January and October.
3.
first
7^*^ Jutiges 111
:
left the
1700,
and
in 1695
;
commission left
it
was
in 1692
;
;
appointed Judge, 1695;
the bench, 1728.— 5.
bench, 1717.
when
left the
Wait Winthrop, Each Judges' pay was a grant of
raised to
£50.— J\Ia^s.
Rec.
p.
391.
1
THE HISTORY
6
[Vol.. n.
A.Dgj692 same times and places, the Court of
terms
Common Pleas held their having authority to " hear and determine all matters re-
:
lating
to
the conservation of the peace, and punishment of of-
fenders, cognizable by
them according
needless expense for
all
to lavjr."
But
being a
it
the Justices of the county to attend
court, four times in the year, merely for the trial of a few minor
offences;
they were
made by
the revising statute of 1699, to
consist only of those designated sion
itself.
Still,
a numerous and
though the
commis-
the Revolution.
till
—
Superior Court
this tribunal, to the
it
was
Appeals the ap-
being put under recognizance to prosecute the cause, to
and produce copies of the process, and of the
his reasons,
evidence adduced at the Justices of u>e Peace,
for the purpose, in the
of Justices was not large,
expensive court,
were allowed from pellant file
list
trial.
of the Peace were civil officers known under the charter of Gorges, never hitherto in the Colony of MassachuJustices
^-
—
setts
An
the Assistants acting as Justices through the jurisdiction.
;
indefinite
commissioned Council;
—
to
number, though not for
hold
their offices
one had jurisdiction of of
was now appointed and
all civil
Each
during good behavior.
causes to the amount of 40s. and
crimes, so far as to commit or recognize to a higher tribu-
all
nal, if
and
great,
each county by the Governor with advice of
they were heinous, and to punish such offences, as assaults
— —and
batteries
profanity
violation of the
breaches
Sabbath
—gaming—drunkenness — by
of the peace,
either
the
stocks,
cage, a fine of 20s. and even stripes not exceeding ten. Court of
^'
Probate,
Probate business,
until
the
colony
transacted in the County Court.
But
charter was vacated. in
1
687, amidst the
cmmges of government, Joshua Scottow* of Scarborough, was commissioned Judge, and his son Thomas, a young graduate of Harvard College, was appointed recorder for Yorkshire. Now,
—
under the new
Province-charter, a Judge and Register were
commissioned by the Executive, during good behavior,
County; and
in
Judge, and John Wincoln, Register. this 6.
for
each
Hook was appointed Any appeal made from
Yorkshire, 1693, Francis
Court, went directly to the Governor and Council.
A
Court of Chancery was established with power,
*'
to hear
* Previously, under President Danforth's administratioD, Mr. Scottow
had been one of the Provincial Council of Maine.
a
Chap,
of Maine.
i.]
17
common
matters of equity, not rellevable at
all
holden
in
Boston,
by three Commissioners,
—
law."
was
It
by
assisted
a. d. 1692
five
were appointed by the Gov-
Court of Chancery,
There was likewise an American Vice-Mmiralty Court ;
^.^^^^f'^^
Masters
in
Chancery,
all
of
whom
ernor and Council. 7.
and Wait JVinthrop* was appointed.
May
22, 1699, by the crown,
or by the high admiral of England, the Judge for
New-York.
and
Besides
New-England
there was a Provincial Justiciary
this,
Court of Admiralty^ holden by the Governor and Council, sitJudge and the Secretary of State, for the trial' bf
—
ting with that
piracies and other crimes,
committed on the high
seas.
From any
decision of the Provincial judicatories or courts, in Appeals lo "own, any personal action, wherein the matter in difference exceeded
£300 king
an appeal was allowed, by the charter, to the
sterling,
in council.
To
revise
and regulate the Militia, a
1693, which directed 60, other than
all
specified
the male inhabitants, between
exempts,f
military duty four days in a year
and equipped wiih a
eral
and
and Commander-in-Chief,
men, and classed be
to
firelock,
into
to
be
enrolled
who were
;
They were
own expense.
their
was passed,
statute
all
to
do
to
furnished at
organized by the Captain-Gen-
companies, severally of 60
into
regiments, whose musters were directed
All military officers of and above
triennial.
and
be well armed
appendages,
its
in
16 and
an
ensign's
rank, he himself without the advice of Council, appointed and
commissioned captains.
On
and
;
all
under that rank were appointed
any alarm given, which was understood
discharge of three guns in succession
convene
in
arms
at the usual
billet a soldier
— —
be
intervals,
place of rendezvous,
But no
await the orders of their officers. or
measured
all
same town were required, under heavy pen-
the soldiers in the alties, to
at
by the
to
officer
and
could quarter
upon any other inhabitant than an innholder
without his consent. All christians, except papists, * son,
The
were expressly allowed by the
successive Judg-es of this Court
were Messrs. Atvvood, Mempes-
Nathaniel Byfield, John Menzis, Robert Achmuty, and,
Chambers
—
Doug. Suram. p. 494. extending not only f These exempts were many P».ussel.
—
the legislature, ministers, deacons, and
all judicial
3
to all
1747,
members
and executive
but to Masters of Arts, herdsmen, and sea captains.
Vol. II
in
1
of
officers
;
The
Miiiiia,
THE HISTORY charter,
tempt
''^
liberty
of conscience
to legalize the old
with any success
be persuaded than to
in
[Vol.
nor would the General Court,
;
recommend an
any
power of
electing
arbitrament or
own
its
after this period,
ecclesiastical disputes, otherwise
compromise.*
To
new
law,
church, however, was given and secured, by a
former rights and privileges
worship and discipline
in
at-
church government, met
platform of
to interfere in
No
God."
the worship of
II.
But
minister.
if
—
the choice
every all
its
also the
was non-
concurred by the town voters, a council, consisting of three or neighboring
five
eiders,
of 1695, to be conclusive.
delegates
or
churches, was to be called,
—whose One
from
decision
statute
great and important duty
— which
enjoined upon towns by law,-
still
respective
their
was by the
was
required them to be
constantly provided with an able, learned and orthodox ministry.
defence of government, justice, liberty and religion, the
In
corner-pillars of the
no
community, there were now provided with
less assiduity than formerly,
what were esteemed
pensable safeguard and panoply, viz. tion
;
the ardor for mental culture
—
indis-
and improvement having no-
Nay, such was
where undergone any abatement.
their
schools and early educa-
zeal for learning, that every town of
still
the public
50 householders was by a
new law finable, that failed to employ a schoolmaster constantly and when the town embraced twice that number of families, the instructor
must be capable of teaching the sciences and learned
languages. Land-titles were a subject of great importance and early conMod-titles
sideration.
By
a colony ordinance of 1652, confirmed by stat-
ute in 1692, peaceable possession, five years, acquired fee-simple.
As
provided, that the owner should not lose his right, claim, within
a
title^
in
the limitation, however, was very short, the law
t(jat
if
he pursued his
length of time, after the close of the present or
second Indian war.
This provision was intended
But no
benefit of the settlers in Maine.
for the particular
territorial
purchases of
the Indians were considered valid, unless they were sanctioned the laws and usages, extant within the constituent sections of
by
the Province, where the lands lay. Bill of rigbU.
In short, the political axioms of this period, drawn into a statute *
6*7/
of rights, and passed
Nor has any Eyaod
in
X692, shew
since b«ea called.
in a
—2 Hulch. Hist.
more peculiar p. 18.
Chap,
of Maine.
i.]
manner the sentiment, sense and
By
community. ties,
19 federative a. D. 1692 10 1693. . .
of the
intelligence .
.
no one might be despoiled of
these,
his liber-
or rights, except by the judgment of his peers or the laws
denied nor deferred
Justice shall never be sold,
of the land.
;
nor shall any one be twice tried, or sentenced for the same of-
of treason, and shall
of twelve men, or by prior
All trials shall be by juries
fence.
in capital felonies
be 2;ranted
be prohibited,
allowed, except
Bail shall always be
established law.
—
*
;
Writs of habeas corpus
at the trials.
in
cases
wherein reasonable challenges shall
never Habeas
nor shall any tax be levied or laid upon the Taxes,
people, without -an act of the legislature.'*
Former laws were perpetuated
by
for a period,
a special statute, ^
till
opportunity was given, either to amend, to revise or re-enact anU
them
;
—
usages retained and practices approved
all
expletives of such legislative acts
becoming
inconsistent with the charter,
ed parts of our
'
common
any judgment rendered
For
law.' in
in after
Pleas.
similated,
mon
law
;
Judicial
by degrees,
—
were made
the furtherance of justice,
parts,
its
new
court of
equally
English
compeo-
among
Every
portion.
heirs,
justice
But
all
strictions
were prescribed
officers
highways
;
;
siderable
* But the
in the
;
regulation of public
and
man-
and re-
JThe powers and
the choice and
of their poor
man and man.
Crown
in
;
of the Govfor the
also particular duties
licensed houses.
to
number of
in the repairs ferries,
of their
and even of
Nay, almost every object of con-
importance, or public
that if the act
;
were revised
in the support
and
fences between
taxatioB.
Rules were given to counties
their prudential affairs
obligations of towns
town
excepting
of the peace
questions of di-
Yorce and alimony, were committed to the decision
agement of
Inheritances
solemnize marriages within his county
every settled minister within his town.
ernor and Council.
Com-
too sacred rn the
be touched by a despotic hand.
divisible or partible,
to
not
time the accredit-
to the free principles of the
to the oldest son a double
was authorized
legal if
process and legal remedies became as-
a code, in most of
ples' view, ever to
as the
the courts of Yorkshire^ since 1686,
might, by a provisional law, be reviewed in the
mon
—
remained unrevived,
as
utility,
received the particular
refused to approve this Bill, for the ministry foresaw
was approved, it would be a security against parliamentary
usages,
A.DM692
[VoL.
THE HISTORY
20
attention of the General Court, within
its first
Remarks,
three or four years
Nor
of legislation, under the province charter.
II.
will the writer
be charged with a needless multiplication of remarks upon the
form of government, and the general administration of affairs—-
when
their
ered,
many
importance
that
fill
operation
in
our present statute books.
In no department, Laws.
consid-
further
revolution, but are the foundation of the " acts"
American
the
it is
and amended, were not only continued
ally revised till
and when
realized,
is
of the most prominent laws and regulations, occasion-
said
it is
by able
civihans,
do the
lights
and
shades of a people's public character appear more conspicuous, than in their code of
criminal law,^
'
of penalties and punishments. their progress, tarnish
happy consideration,
—
in
the scale and species
Eutopean governments,
If
pages with more and more blood,
its
in
it is
a
and im-
that with us, practical experience
proved policy, have taken a juster view of crimes, and pursued
them with
By
a correspondent moderation as to penalties.
ucating the mind, and deepening the moral sense, crimes
prevented
—
According
time enacted,
— murder,
to a classification in the
treason,
ond conviction,
bestiality, arson,
capital crimes
:
code
piracy, rape, robbery on a sec-
assaults
and
batteries,
irauds, usury, sabbath-breaking, and
Though among little
its
all
modes
:
and the
gambling, drunkenness,
breaches of the peace.
the penalties and punishments, torture no lon-
appearance, ingenuity seems to have been not a
new and
exerted in the work of inventing ;
all
Burglary, forgery, blasphemy, perjury, adultery
embraced
ger makes
that
at
polygamy, and witchcraft were
and larceny were public offences of the second class third
be
not by aggravating the forfeitures, or sharpening the
punishments. offences.*"^
ed-
may
—some of which were
that age, mistaken as
it
cruel
if
various kinds and
not barbarous.
In truth,
was, appeared determined to try by tests
of experiment, what indelible marks of disgrace upon the body could
and
effect,
towards preventing crimes, and reforming the heart
habits of the offender.
pillory, stocks or cage^
whipped to a post
; ;
and
their foreheads
For, besides a confinement sitting
branded
in the
on the gallows, convicts were ;
their
ears cut off or nailed
and the tongue of a convicted blasphemer, perforated
with a redhot iron.
Even
ten stripes might be inflicted
by a
constable, in execution of a sentence awarded by a justice of the
peace.
— Chap,
of Maine.
i.]
21
had been
Idolatry and heresy, which
considered offences punishable by law
;
a re-enactment recorded against witchcraft,
mitted, the
was death.*
The
impossibility.
trials
—more
If such a crime
of proving
difficulty
it,
the country
were ever com-
necessarily borders on
of the accused were principally
Of
Indians.
was involved
in a
when
;
in
Sa-
1692,
the whole number,' convicted of witchcraft, 19 were,.,.
and
the spell
became
utter
in
bloody war with the eastern
fifty
others were prisoners
was
dissolved, and this master spirit of delusion,
effectually
expelled
from
in
,
Witchcraft.
.
,
executed
by
sullied,
especially since
lem (Massachusetts); and the height of the delusion was
when
A. D^^I692
greatly to be re-
it is
book should be again
gretted, that a page of the statute
the penalty affixed
were no longer
capital,
and
close confinement,
distempered and credulous
minds, by force of good sense and sound principles in religion
and reason.
Though we have no record Maine
;
of a conviction for this crime in
a single case of one, formerly an inhabitant,
George Burroughs,
impropriety be mentioned.
county, and a worthy minister of the gospel,
Falmouth between 1685 and 90, was arrested tried for witchcraftf at *
To encounter
a
'
Salem,
demoniacal
in
without Bmrmighs.
Essex
who preached at
1692, on three indictments
The
first
at
Danvers, and
spirit of delusion,' a colon}-
passed against icitchcrafl in 1646.
may
a native of
;
and
ordinance was
execution under
it,
was
at
There were several other cases in different parts of New-England before 1688, when the infatuation became more dreadful; Charlestown
and
in 1650.
in the course of three or four successive years, filled
with misery and alarm.
The
Massachusetts
were pinched, pressed and otherwise tortured by an invisible hand— accusing- some one, who was hence soon arrested and tried. See 2 Hutch Hist. p. 22-62. sufferers said they
—
f *
* *
The Indictment alleged—'
that the said Burrotighs, late of Falmouth,
May
current, and divers days and times before
Clerk, on the 9th day of
and since at Salem, certain detestable acts, called witchcrafts and sorceries> wickedly and feloniously hath used, practised and exercised, in and
upon one Mary Walcot of Salem village, singlewoman by which said wicked acts she is tortured, afflicted, wasted and tormented against the peace, and contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and * provided.' He pleaded, that he was " not g'wiZ/y."--On the trial the One witness said, upon oath, I have seen evidence was such as follows Burroughs put his finger into the muzzle of a gun and hold it out straight and though he said an Indian present did the same, none of us could re-
«
;
—
were followed by the treaty of Rysmentioned, which happily put a
before
war
in
America.
—By
the
7th
article,
it
mutual restitution should be made of all the countries, colonies and forts, taken by either party during the
French.
that
virtue of which, unfortunately,
Acadia or Nova Scotia,
without any definite boundaries, returned once more to the undis-
puted possession of the French. treaty,
was any
Neither
Only
western limits of that Province.
Breda, provision was merely made missioners to settle that question.
BoUMhey
in
the war, nor in the
done towards determining the
thing effectually
in this, as in
for the
the treaty of
appointment of com-
Meanwhile, the
state
of the
France, by treaty, and
case Spontaneously revived the controversy
chusetis
Massachusetts, by charter, both strenuously claiming the Sagada-
daiiock.^"^
hock provincc,
or country between Kennebeck and St.
Moreover the French, not content with sions eastward, presently undertook to prietors of the eastern fisheries,
their
territorial
make themselves
and even proceeded
Croix. posses-
sole pro-
to take pos-
session of Louisiana.f
A.D.
1G98.
In the
summer of 1698,
a frigate on
her passage from France
to Port-Royal, meeting with an English colonial fishing vessel,
near
Cape
French
Sable, gave the master a translated order from the
king, authorizing the seizure of
* 2 [lolmes' A. +
Ann.
p.
all
English vessels found
32.
Origin of the French claim to the river Mississippi.
chased by the United States, A. D. 1803.
Country
piii
;;
Chap, fishing
27
of Maine.
i.]
He
on the coast.
notice of the order
;
was
other vessels a.d.
also told, to give all
Bonaventure,
i698.
Enviux, soon afterwards
in the
boarding several and sending them to their homes, with a similar errand.
Governor Villebon was more from St John,*
was directed by
that he
to the country,
source to nations
mouth
its
letter,
—
as
Kennebeck
French
all
from
river
upon
its
YiUeht'n
-a
^j^^pei
its
banks, must no longer
be considered subjects of the English crown but and that
Sept. 5,
leaving the course of the river free to both
that the Indians dwelling
;
his
master, to maintain his claim
his royal
westward
far
as
In
definite.
Lieutenant-Governor Stoughton, he stated,
to
American fishermen, on the
natives
free
coast, or traders
ports, eastward of that river, will
be seized
to
the
For, said he,
:
you cannot be ignorant how plainly " it is prohibited by the treaty " between the two crowns, which you yourself sent to me." To strengthen the claim tribe, the el
;
and
French
this
this
and secure the alliance of the Canibas year
built at
was followed by
Norridgewock, a catholic chap-
a frequent epistolary correspondence,
between Ralle, the resident missionary, and the
Canada and Nova
When
Governors of
Scotia.
complaints of these encroachments were presented to Pemaquid
the Lords of
Trade and
always
" on the English right as far as the river St Croix
insist
Plantations, they replied, that they should
and strongly urged the government of Massachusetts " to rebuild " the fort at Pemaquid a work, they said, " which ought
—
" long before
The
to
have been done."
controversy was renewed
grounds taken by the disputants.
—proceeding
" Acadia" was expressly conceded St.
Germains,f of
which
in fact
upon the former
The French to
them by the
Breda,J and now of Ryswick
treaties of P"*®-
—
a country
extended much farther westward than Kennebeck
and that they had always claimed, and frequently occupied, as
But
as that river.
the English contended, that
was the Province resigned, and no more
;
JVbm
far
Scotia-^
and that when the two
and Andros was Provincial Governor
crowns were
in
alliance,
under James
II,
he established a garrison
possession of Penobscot.
*'
It is true,
at
Pemaquid, and took
the question
was somewhat
*
In 1700, the entire garrison and settlement removed to Port-Royal,
t
Ante, A. D. 1632.
t
Tj,e ri^ht to
insisted, that ho4^1n"dis-
still
Ante, A. D. 1668.
[VoL.
THE HISTORY
28 A. D. 1699.
embarrassed by Lord Cromwell's charter of the country, granted forty-two years before, to Sir
western
limits
Thomas Temple
by which the
Mus-
were fixed at St. Georges' river, or perhaps
Even John Nelson,
congus.
before mentioned,
when
a
prisoner
January 26, 1698, that though the French and
in Paris, wrote,
much
Indians should claim to Kennebeck, they might, without difficulty,
be restrained
he, " this
May
26.
mom
s^c-^
II.
the river
to
St.
Georges, " for," added
was always the ancient boundary
my
in
uncle
late
Thomas Temple's patent. "f RicHARD e«rZ Bellamont arrived at Boston, May 26, 1699, ^^^^ New-York, of which he was the Governor, and now also Thoroughly acquainted
successor of Sir William Phips.
Phlps^'^^*
with the nature and extent of the eastern claim, as pursued by the officers of the French, and knowing the intrigues of that cabinet with the Stuart succession of
kings, he in
the General Court expressed himself subjects
;
same time
with
not failing at the
to exalt
Divine Providence, (said the Governor,)
happy and wonderful revolution
late
make
to
speeches to
his
master.
royal
pass the
in bringing to
England, has been pleased
king William, the glorious instrument of our deliverance,
from the odious
fetters
which had been
artfully
subvert
in
his
warmth upon those
all
Qur
civil
that king favored,
and chains of popery and despotism, used to enslave our consciences and
rights.
It
too well
is
known what
of what religion he died, and no
nation
less,
what
must have been the execrable treachery of him, who parted with Acadia or Nova Scotia and the noble fishery on
that coast.
his present Majesty, a true English king, entirely
of his people, has restored
and greatness, exposing
to
our
in
But
the interest
nation the character of valor
his royal
person, in the fronts of our
battles. J. Bridges,
In the short administration of
Lord Bellamont,
the public atten-
veyor^Gen- tion was particularly turned towards the Provinces of Maine and
Sagadahock. lands,
served
two
By
the charter,
feet in diameter
for the
timber trees upon the crown
use of the royal navy
tree of that size,
;
and any person
without license, incurred
Ante, A. D. 1656-7,
p.
felling a
a penalty of
£100
363.
f 1 Coll. Jlass. Hist, Soc. p. 136,
He
all
12 inches from the ground, were re-
3d series.— 3 Charlevoix's
jV.
F.
p.
348-9.—
says Villieuand a British envoy, agreed upon St. Georges as the boun-
dary.
But quere
?
'
Chap,
of maine.
i.]
The
sterling.
first
29
He was A. D.
surveyor-general was John Bridges.
1699.
commissioned by the king, and came over with Lord Bellamont.
He
His jurisdiction embraced New-England. deputy surveyors; and about
£800
to deal with sibilities
Often called
sterling."^
wood
usually had
four
few years, the annual charge was
in a
of their trust great, and
its
in
the course of their duties,
men, they found the respon-
cutters and rough
performance sometimes
diffi-
cult.
But
was among the greatest
it
weakened towns and
hundreds of freeholders, or the
to the places of their birth,
heirs of deserted realties, returned, during the season, and
ed former abodes, or half wilderness lands
Men
tions.
CO,
Saco
in
Scarborough
in
Falmouth
in
habita-
and
;
;
to
Black-point and
Winter-Harbor and the Falls
to
;
Cape-Porpoise
to
;
;
visit-
repaired their
with their families removed to the peninsula of Cas- Falmouth,
Purpooduck and Spurwink,
Blue-point
many
more perhaps constructed new
dilapidated cottages, and
set-
Destitute of homes:^ yet attach-
tlements of this eastern country.
ed
prevailing on the re-
anxieties
turn of peace, to revive the wasted and
Cape-Neddock
to
;
Sa'co and
vived.^
— and
during the present and succeeding summer, those places were re-
To
peopled with several abiding families.
assist
and Kittery, "including the precinct of Berwick,"
York, Wells,
—towns which
had survived the war, and were struggling with embarrassments
;
y^^|.j^
j^^^
s'sted.
the General Court, within the period of three or four years, grant-
ed them more than £100, out of the public treasury, towards the
Besides these encouragements,
support of a gospel ministry.
Wells
particular,
in
was aided
and pecuniary
ability
;
building a meeting-house
by a
Settlements were also undertaken on
generous public donation.
Lower
both sides of Pejepscot
in
by gentlemen of energy
Falls, f
and those, as well
Pejcpspot.
as the preceding towns,
might have risen and flourished, had not some adventitious
cir-
cumstances soon prevented.
A
false
culation
and malicious report was fabricated and sent
among
the Indians,
representing, that though
into cir- Theindians
they,
by
the late treaty, were the king's subjects, and had a pledge of his protection
;
his Majesty's
colonists
were preparing
the tribes and utterly extirpate them. *
1
Doujj. Sum.
p.
+ 3
Mass. Hist.
Soc. p, 141.
to
fall
upon
So much were they pro-
484.
— Especially Topsliain.
fa^i^e^^gp^j-j*^
THE HISTORY
30 and incensed by
A. D. 1699. voiced
[VoL.
many of them The rumor probably
this story, that
excite a general insurrection.
II.
strove to
originated
among the French.* Callieres, successor of Count Frontenac,f now engaged in establishing a treaty with the Five Nations, or Mohawks, was determined
to
destroy,
if
possible, the
subsisting
harmony and peace between the English colonists and the eastern natives. These he intended to make his own steadfast and perpetual allies
and
;
more malevolent than
his emissaries,
were the authors and heralds of the The Gov-
As
ernor's Pro-
clamaiion.
could not be foreseen
it
rise,
to
;
watch
means
ticable
their
them
lic,
plepara-
in the
were actually
1" March, 1700, there
evening
adopt
all
prac-
any injury
if
also required,
by
stat-
The pub-
morning.
till
Court,
whcn
provision
infested with hostile savages.
was a
was made
special meeting of the General for a levy of soldiers,
was appointed purveyor of York,
1
5 at Kittery, and
12 or 13
men
in the
1
supplies,
— 30
5 at Wells
;
for
soldiers
were posted
at
and the legislature allowed
county of York,
gable services during the late alarm.
and
Eliakim Hutchinson^
holding the militia in constant readiness.
to
to
and defence,
entertained strong suspicions, though without cause, that
the frontiers 1700
safety
how^ever, being disturbed, nothing could fully allay their fears.
They A D
own
and
;
Town-watches were
be kept from nine
no just provoca-
to give the Indians
motions and behavior
for their
should be offered. | ute, to
excitement
this
the Governor issued his proclamation, cautioning the
people, and requiring tion
what height °
to
_
^
might
himself,
and mischievous story.
false
£137
To
popish missionaries from the eastern parts,
for their indefati-
terrify or
remove the
who were, by
report,
seducing the Indians from their allegiance to the king, and exciting
them
to a rupture
them
to depart the Province, before the 10th of the ensuing
;
a legislative aqt was passed, which required
tember, otherwise they would,
if
taken, be the subjects of
Sep-
exem-
plary punishment. ^^ord Bellamont, after a year's tarry in the Province, returned
mom checks piracy.
New-York
iq
:
and what rendered
his administration
memorable.
* 2
Hutch. Hist. p. 113. Frontenac died in 1698, ag-ed 78,
| 6 Mass. Rec. p. 57. §Eliakim was tlie son of William Hutchinson, who came over to Boston in 1636, and who, in 1673, purchased of William Phillips, a large tract of
t
land on the westerly side of the Saco, and owned mills at Newichawannock. In 1750, Kliakim sold the Saco estate to
Mr. Allen,
for £l,200.
— Chap, were
31
of Maine.
i.]
successes against the a.d.
uncommon They had infested
measures and
his judicious
pirates and bucaneers.
i700,
the coasts for thirty
now became bold, since the late war, to a fearful deThe chief freebooters, Kidd and Bradish, also several
years, and gree.
other desperadoes, were seized, sent to England, and executed
was
and happy
it
they were,
at length,
It
was another
and
;
fishing vessels, that
delivered from such a pestiferous annoyance.
proposition of the Governor's enlightened policy, to
For in the mouth of the river Piscataqua. were not wholly subdued, or war should be the
Great Island
fortify
either if piracy alternative itory
for the eastern coasters
or
;
if
;
fortify
Great
^" there were a desideratum for a military depos-
upon the eastern
peace
Proposes to
coast, or
for
Isi-
'
a place of naval resort in
he thought the Island when strongly
fortified,
great public importance, especially a defence to
would be of
New-Hampshire.
But the latter considered it an enterprize of equal interest to Maine ; and as she had been impoverished by the late war, she felt
herself inadequate to the undertaking, without the assistance
of Massachusetts.*
The
apprehensions of a rupture with the Indians gradually subJJ^^^^JJ^^'j^g
sided
;
and the hopes of a continued peace gave encouragement,
and even an impulse
to
But an undertaking so broad and
Maine.
lations ot ten years war,
No
mills,
no inclosures, no roads
country, at the present period.
remedy, as
*
1
;
They and
Bdk.
and I
destroyed
members,f some of
all
of them were
men
map the ;
:
—These
of this
ill-fated
muniments of
and therefore to
and prevent contro-
Committee of Claims.
whom were
^°™f".'^^*'^
acquainted
of intelligence and repu-
appointed times and places for their regular ses-
after receiving
JV*.
this period,
Deeds and
General Court established a
with the law, and
sions
to portray a
either mutilated or
consisting of seven
tation.
and melancholy ruins
far as possible, this singular evil,
versies, the
the deso-
but on the contrary, dilapidat-
;
fields,
were the dark shades with which were
difficult, after
was attended with every discouragement.
ed habitations, wide wasted
land-titles
country,
those engaged in the resettlement of
H.
245.
and examining
all titles
and claims
to
— Great Island, however, was fortified not long- after
and became a
stronj^ fortress.
It
was called " Fort William
Nary.^''
The committee, were Samuel
son, Nathaniel Byfield,
Jlass. Rec.
p.
158,
Sewall, John VValley, Eliakim Hutchin^ Timothy Clark, Samuel Phips, and Israel Tay. 6
W
32
'''ti'-
[Vol.
history;
A. D. 1701. lands in these eastern provinces, they,
obedience to their
in
ii.
di-
rections, reported their proceedings with facts, to the legislature.
But
May.
the aspect of affairs, the
1701, being more
next spring,
Lt. (jov
apprehends
dark and portentous, gave new and fresh damps to the ardor
and fortitude of be
On
settled.
The peace
settlers.
Europe appeared not
in
the contrary, Lieut. Governor Stoughton,
address to the two branches of the legislature, sion, told
and that extensive
;
riously apprehended.
he
May
ses-
them, that from intelligence received, the clouds gath-
ering over the eastern continent,
storm
at their
to his
in
hostilities
to
forebode a returning
among
the nations were se-
such an alternative,
In
said, that this country
seemed
must be a large and
was foreseen,
it
suffering partaker
;
and it would be gaining a great point " to fix the natives in his " Majesty's interest, and to prevent them from joining with the " French." ^^^^
tlie^eastern
4nbes.
purpose, several gentlemen, early in the season, visited
the eastern tribes
and
;
met with considerable
in
the important labors of reconciliation,
success.
It
was believed, much might be
by sending protestant missionaries
effected
aid of this
among them
A
policy, king William established "
;
and
Society in
in
Eng-
land for projaagating the Gospel in foreign par is. Jealousy of
Never had the American French looked with a more eye than tranquil
gaged
at present,
upon
settlements were reviving
;
in the
Newfoundland
year
;
and
;
fisheries,
About 2,700 fishermen, and 220 gle
The
this eastern region.
and the English people, en-
were making great voyages.
were employed
vessels
were not only awakened but increased
;
oil.
Governor stoughton, II,
and wil-
^^lat added peculiar interest to deaths of Several in a period, *
this
and while the English
short of thirteen months.
New-York, March
5,
1701
;
—
with-
Earl Bellamont died at
ing, affable
and courteous;" and professing in religion
Mas-
Alw^ays " condescend-
New-Hampshire and Maine.
himself universally popular.
were
—happening
the Governor of that Colony,
sachusetts,
moderate principles
;
it.
crisis,
important
persons
distinguished
fish,
Old jealousies
colonies deprecated a war, the French seemed to desire
James
this sin-
they took and cured 200,000 quintals of
besides 4,000 hogsheads of train and liver
Lord^BeHa-
invidious
Indians were
to
be "of the most
and government," he rendered
His death was followed by that of
Lieutenant-Governor William Stoughton, who deceased July 7th, leaving a character justly ornamental of the various important
Chap, offices
33
of mal\e.
i.]
he had so honorably
These
filled.
executive reins and management, for the cil,
by
acting
majorities of
members
events committed the A.D.
Coun-
time, to the
first
present, never
less
Germains, Sept. 16, died James
than a
quorum.
Also
now more
than twelve years since abdicated the British realm.
at St.
His son, surnamed
in his favor,
crown
to limit the
concluded
to settle
at
catholic, the English nation
it
sister to
hand, as king William died his
and
finally
upon Anne, princess of Denmark, another
Mary, the
American,
March
8,
of William,
late wife
The
there should be need ot a successor.
lamented by
For,
had resolved
to the protestants of the royal line,
daughter of James, and
—whenever
and the French monarch by
;
enkindled anew the flames of war.
was a
as the Pretender
having
England, the " Preteiider,^^ immediately
in
aspired to the throne of his father
declaring
II.
1702
a
;
event was
monarch deeply
and Dutch subjects.
as well as British
As Anne immediately ascended the throne, she only delayed till the 4th of May, to publish a declaration of war aeainst France, .
Her
noJi,
.
.
.
^'^y^ Queen
ministry persisted in asserting an exclusive ownership of the Anne's wnr ,
Sagadahock Province, and
a
wilh
.
.
common
right with the
French, to
France,
the navigation and fisheries of the Acadian seas.
This doctrine so much disrelished by Villebon, was utterly conBrouillon, temned by J ^
son of
le
Bourgne revived an
tion of the great
him,^ the Countenanced by J
his successor.
ancestral claim to the easterly sec- French,
Acadian peninsula
;
and as soon as he heard of
war, he exacted of every English vessel, 50 crowns, for license to trade
The New-Englanders were
on that coast.*
affi-onted
by
this
that they sent out vessels, with orders to
seized
Nova
make
a general
sweep
Consequently some of the wrongdoers they
—some they drove
restrained from hanging
the
so highly
and other aggressions of a similar character,
over these waters.
into the
woods,
—
nor were they hardly
up one Capt. Baptiste
as a pirate. f
Even
Scotia Indians, on the rumor of war, seized three fish-
ing vessels, belonging to Massachusetts interposition of Brouillon,
;
and
if
they, through the
were restored, Callieres
fully justified
—By
his treaty with
himself for exciting the Indians to
hostilities.
the Five Nations, three years before, he had acquired great credit •*
4C Univ. Hist.
1 Univ. Hist. p. '
p. 135.
148.
— Brouillon,
would amply avenge himself by
Vol.
II.
5
pifficiiies.
eastern
declared,
reprisals.'
if
they did not desist, he
[VoL.
THE HISTORY
34 A. D. 1702. as a negotiator
;
and he
who were
Indians,
said, the
II.
proprietors
of the eastern country, had long since committed themselves to
French
the
upon
as their protectors
;
while the English were intruders
property, and invaders of the French jurisdictional
their
rights.
Quecu Anne commissioned Joseph Dudley, Esq. Governor Massachusetts, Maine and New-Hampshire, and Thomas
fe/s arWvai aiBosiou.
Povey, Lieutenant-Governor
chusetts,
whom
both of
;
had been as well her agent
at the British
one of the mandamus Council
He to
in
bui"dii/The Pern-
was afterwards Chief Justice of New-York
member
^^'^^
make
his present
and returning
;
Isle
to
Strongly urged the General
instructions from the crown,
Court, in his
first
speech, to
The
appropriations for rebuilding the fort at Pemaquid.
—lime
in
of
commission.
foundations (he said) were entire. ing,
who
of Parliament for Newtown, before
Governor Dudley, accordins:
—most of
great plenty could be
entrenchments remained, and it
Andros' administration,
in
England, was appointed Lieutenant-Governor of the
he received
^o^' .at
He was
the revolution of 1689, and confined twenty weeks.
Wight, and elected The Gov,
as a
court,
New-England.
colonial assistant, and the president of
was seized
arrived at Boston on
Mr. Dudley, a native inhabitant of Massa-
the 11th of June.
if
made
a garrison
the walls were standin
the vicinity
;
—
the
were established there,
would be the means of keeping possession of the country, and
affording relief in emergency.
Queen would a hundred
Besides
all this,
he expected, the
probably, at the expanse of the crown,
He
soldiers.
a flourishing and safe condition
Port-Royal
that in his opinion,
opposed building the bear the expense
;
and
if
with in
and
itself
might be captured, by two
;
They
fort.
it
he did not hesitate to say,
But
men.
ships and a thousand
man
wished to see the eastern provinces
the
House of Representatives
thought the Province unable to
the establishment
were renewed,
be maintained, and a wider seaboard defended
;
it
must
Falmouth being
the remotest eastern settlement yet revived since the last war. May,
1703.
5 Coundf.
At
the general election in
negative to five of the
new
May, 1703,
elected
lors.
talents, popularity
they acted
and influence.
in his arrest
he
;
who were men of
But he remembered
the
part
and imprisonment, fourteen years before,
and he was not disposed spects,
the Governor gave his
Council
to repress his resentments.
In other re-
manfully applied his splendid abilities, his courtly
man-
Chap,
of maine.
i.]
and
ners,
35
extensive knowledge, to render
his
all
the acts of his a.d.
1703.
administration acceptable to every class of people.
As
between the English and French crowns had ^ r^n^of °^ Indian lios; a war with the Indians appeared inevit- ^iiities.
hostilities in
_
^
_
commenced The able.
Europe
first
of a meditated attack,
intelligence he received
He
was from Lord Cornbury, Governor of New-York. that
a
the stories of the christian natives
if
were worthy
mixed army of French and Indians, were preparing
descent upon Deerfield,
stated,
of credit, to
and perhaps upon some other
make
a
frontier
settlements in Massachusetts, or possibly in Maine.
know
of solicitude to
Full
eastern Sagamores, Gov.
the temper and disposition of the Gov. Dud-
Dudley
sent
them messages, by which
wUh'thl^"
he requested them to meet him on the 20th of June, upon Casco junemh^' Attended by a considerable retinue, '"^ ^^sco. peninsula in Falmouth. consisting of gentlemen
chusetts and
from the Penacooks, the Sokokis, the Anasagunticooks, the All the Indians appeared to great
Canibas, and the Tarratines.*
They were
advantage. of them
fancifully
painted, as to give tribe
was
armed,
well
decorated
— and
them looks
arrived,
in
a
flotilla
spread, large enough to enclose and
these,
themselves;
when
seated, the
clad,
terrific.
—some
faces so
Probably no one
Anasagunticooks
accommodate
;
A
of 65 canoes.
attendants, with the principal
his
Among
—handsomely
the most of their
truly
so fully represented as the
250 of them and
indi-
had the pleasure of a conference with a large delega-
viduals, he tion
belonging to the legislatures of Massa-
New-Hampshire, and many other respectable
the
for
about
tent
was
Governor
Sagamores and Sachems.
English promiscuously dispersed
being not wholly without
apprehensions for their
own safety. The Governor, arisins:, addressed the Indian assemblage to this ^ ° purport / have come to you, commissioned by the great and good queen of England. I would esteem you all as brothers and friends. Yes, it is even my wish to reconcile every difficulty, :
—
whatever,
'
that has
short interval, Capt. *
'
^
happened
Simmo,
The Sag'amores were Adiwando and Hegen, Penacooks
moriy of
Peg-wacket [Saco]
Moxus and
;
After a
since the last treaty.
the chief speaker, gravely
;
replied
;
Waltanum-
JSIesamhomell and Wexar. from Androscoggin
;
Bomaseen and Capt. Samuely of Kennebeck; and Warrungunt and Wanadugunbuent^ from Penohscol.-^Penhallow's Indian Wars,— I Coll. JsT. H. Hut. Soc. p. 20. (another) Hopehood, of Norridgewock
;
The
conference.
36
THE HISTORY
[VoL.
II.
We
A. D. 1705
thank you, good brother, for coming so far to talk with a great favor. The clouds fly and darken but we sing with love the songs of peace. Believe my words.
us.
—
It is
still
So far
as the sun is above the earth ;
war, or the least rupture between us.
wampam,
Governor with a
belt of
and good
and received
faith
ents, with
;
much apparent
—
—
are
our thoughts from
They
then presented the
the usual
token of sincerity
hands several
at his
The
satisfaction.
flattering pres-
parties then repaired
two stone pillars or heaps of portable rocks, pitched
to
treaty, called by the significant
—
former
at a
name Two Brothers, where
solemn professions of friendship were further
ratified
the
by the addi-
tion of other stones.
The
reluctance.
was incomplete.
council treaty
commenced by the Sagamores, Wattanummon said, their
parley had evidently been
some degree of
with
embrace
as
many
Consequently, wishing
ernor submitted to some delays
were discussed
;
and
it
have the
it,
the
it
was
was
in
Several sub-
finished.
agreed,
finally
Gov-
was
the negotiation, which
in
progress two or three days, before jects
to
could be drawn into
tribes as
that
trading
houses should be established, the price of commodities stated and settled,
and an armorer provided
at the public
Boma-
charge.
seen and Captain Samuel, frankly acknowledged, that *' several " missionaries from the friars, lately among them, had endeav-
" ored to break the union and seduce them from their allegiance " to the crown of England, but had made no impressions on them,
"
for they were, (he said) as firm as the great rocks,
" continue so
as long as the sun
happy conclusion of
S*^""*^'" firing a
grand round on each
were requested and for lets
fired it :
first.
was confirmed by
In this ceremony, the Indians
They
admitted the compliment
Their treachery was now abundantly manifest
was perceived
—
this interview
side.
to take the lead.
and should
and moon endured."
that their guns
had
all
been loaded with bul-
so charged, probably with intent to have
made
the
En-
glish the victims of the negotiation,
had they not been promiscu-
ously seated in the general meeting,
among
cessions of
200 French and
firmed the suspicions, that
the Sagamores.
Ac-
Indians, three days afterwards, con-
in the
delays requested, the Sagamores
only awaited their arrival, when, with their aid, they would have
probably seized the Governor and his attendants, and sacrificed
Chap,
OF MAINE
i.]
the inhabitants at pleasure. cast no just imputations
37
these circumstances, however,
If
upon the
of the Indians, "every
fidelity
As
" thing assumed the promising aspect of a settled peace."
made themselves merry
usual on such occasions, they
and raising loud shouts, or acclamations
ing, dancing,
The
A. d. 1703.
with sing-
of joy.
on the whole, greatly revived the
n^^pes of
desponding hearts of the people, and enlivened their hopes, that
p^ace."*''*
this
result of the conference
country might escape the awful destiny of another Indian war,
" The eastern inhabitants, says Mr. Penhallow,^ who before had *•
thoughts
" ground
;
more were
" partly from the
" advantage of as from
were now encouraged
of removing, several
fertility
fishery,
of the
soil,
stand
to
also preparing to settle
their
among them,
the plenty of timber, the
and several other inducements
as well
encouragements offered them by proprietors and by gov-
But
ernment.
all
these prospects were
mere
which
illusions,
subsequent events speedily dissipated. * His " History of the wars of
-p. 5. I The population
ew-England with the eastern Indians."
IN
at
120,000.-2 Holmes' A. Ann.
p.
—
been variously estimated In 323.— In 1696, at 100,000, and in 1701, 31-54.— In 1750, at 354,000.-2 Doug.
of New-Eng-land has
1692, at 200,000.-39 Univ. Hist. p.
:
The quotas of men to be furassist New- York ag-ainst the Indians, were thus — Mass. and Maine, 350 Connecticut, 120 Rhode New-Hampshire, 40 New- York, 200 East and West Jersey, Island, 48 120; Pennsylvania, 80; Maryland, 160, and Virginia, 240.~But the popuSumm.
p. 180.
These cannot
nished in 1701,
[1
Belk.
all
be correct.
H.
246,
Note
*J to
:
;
;
;
lation of Massachusetts, in 1742,
;
;
was.
164,000; of Rhode-Island, in 1738,
15,000;— the towns of New-Hampshire, A. D. 1699, were only five. Hence the -probable population in Kew-England^ A. D. 1703, was at least 150,000 s
—
viz.
Massachusetts,
70,000
Rhode-Island,
New-Plymouth,
15,000
New-Hampshire,
Connecticut,
35,000
Maine,
120,000 -1
12,000
5 or
12,000
6,000
80,000=150,000.
THE HISTOHY
38
CHAPTER The third Indian
loar
— The
[Vol.
II.
French draw some of the Eastern The Colonists and Inlatter ; and the former despoil the
Tribes to St. Francois and Becancourt dians
—Mischief done by
the
habitation of Castine the younger
5 of
—
— The Indians
towns— The enemy
the eastern
11.
attack at once,
Casco
repulsed at
—
—Black— — —
York and Berwick attacked Bounties for scalps Pcquods stationed at Berwick Col. Church's Gth E. Expedition Saco fort defensible Hilton's scout Exchange of prisoners
point,
—
—
— — Gov. Dudley urges rebuilding of fort Pemaquid— Mischiefs done York and Kittcry — Indians war — Hilton' feats of Black-point — Col March's expedition against Port-Royal—Attacks on maining Maine — A smart skirmish Saco — Also at — Berjvick of Maine — Rumors of a contemplated attack from Canada — Nicholson' proposed expedition against Port-Roy— Gov. Dudley's remarks — Port-Royal captured, changed Annapolis, and Vetch appointed Governor — Mission of Livingston and younger Castine Quebec — Attacks by Indians — Chiefs go England— Expedition against Canada — 26 persons Maine — Skirmish at Wells — Treaty of Utrecht — Peace negotiated with Indians Portsmouth — Incidents of war — Character of Bomasecn, Assacombuit and Illicit
trade to
Nova
the
Scotia suspected
the
at
at
tired
the
at
s
the re-
toivns in
at
3Jiserics
s
al
to
the
to
the
to
fruitless
killed
iti
the
at
the
Castine the younger.
An
A. D. 1703.
The
Indian
Indian war always has associations, which Strike the mind
So shocking
with pain.
to the attributes of hunaanity, are the cir-
cumstances, which frequently attend lamities, cruelties,
and hardships, ed a burden
its
its
progress, that were
only characteristics,
to history.
it
might justly be consider-
But every war with the
opes facts and peculiarities, worthy of the notice has l$t,orking pjimp's
its
The {^x^^
own first
features and
own
natives, it
devel-
claims.
It
cast of character.
one would have been a
fair
sample of savage war-
had not the Indian warriors used firearms, instead of the
bow and its
ca-
carnage and suffering, or even personal exploits
traits
arrow.
and
single-handed,
Skulk, ambush, surprize and massacre, were
footsteps,
from beginning to end.
They
without the arts or aid of Europeans.
fought
Their
Chap,
39
OF MAINE
ii.]
noble. A. D. 1703.
numbers were respectable, and their motives comparatively For though their design was partly to avenge themselves of juries
;
was
it
King
recover their entire native country.
By
continuing only about three years.
ways it,
tired
was
The
and exhausted.
war was
Philip's
short,
a long one, they are al-
time chosen by them for closing
when they could com-
of their successes,
in the height
in-
the obtrusive settlers, and
principally to disperse
mand for themselves an honorable peace. and manasjed instigated The next war was in a otrreat decree o ° ° acquaintthemselves thoroughly had made who French; by the ed with the
'^'"g
2^,-.
William's war.
and habitudes of the Indians, and the
disposition
springs by which their subserviency could be completely control-
The
led.
Jesuits
had strongly infected
themselves to great merit,
titled
—
fighting
tories.
fare,
by
their side,
Campaign,
— and
sidered the greatest trophies for
into treaties,
;
leading
;
captives and
artifice
them
to
of war-
arts
were con-
scalps
premiums being
offered and paid
was a long war,
latter
they had sued for
for after
French
;
—The
them by the French.
about ten years
—
helping them to achieve vic-
undermining, and other
siege,
were taught and promoted
en-
of the Indians,
in the estimation
by furnishing them with arms and ammunition, war,
and pre-
their superstition
The Canadian French had
judices, with papal fanaticism.
was able
to
lasting
peace and entered savages an
give the
of treachery, their vengeance was re-
effectual impulse to acts
kindled, and their minds inflated with new-formed expeditions.
Another, called Queen Anne's war,
now opened under circum- 3d,
A
stances differing from either of those preceding. val of
peace had,
no
in
considerable
They saw
strength of the Indians.
degree,
recruited the
were thinned
that their tribes
;
and that they had gained nothing permanent by former wars.
Every hope of enjoying was
full
their native
territories,
and what was recovered
presently lost in peace,
if
agreed with the French,
land,
freed of white
in
war,
^not actually resigned in
their
if
any thing, was
by
treaty.
They
aversion to the English, and in
a hatred of their free politics and religious sentiments; and
such passions, they
know
in
men,
Their fathers had conveyed extensive
of despondency.
when
minds undisciplined, are inflamed by fanaticism,
neither restraint nor limits.
with the arts of civilized vate their character.
life,
All
seemed rather
their
or
short inter- Anne's
acquaintance
to abase,
They made no advancements
than elein
mental
war.
A.D.
[VoL.
THE HISTORY
40 1703.
culture, moral sense, honest industry, or
manly enterprize.
fatuated with the notion of catholic indulgences, they
inranimosity, insolence and
placable
given
;
ardent
for
all
was evidently
;
and
Aware
a
spoils
new
persuaded the shattered
tribes to collect
Becancourt
Francois
Canada
in
;
Lawrence on
Vaudreuil, his successor.
—two
and
the southerly
Indian village of Becancourt
above the mouth of the river in
settle at
is
;
side,
—
the
was
They
Becancourt
small rivers, which
the Perante, about 80, and the other
tance
taken, Callieres,*
expedient, which
vFraiicois.
into the St.
averse to wars,
numbers, without any other considerable
their
M. de
St.
Their natu-
abating.
ardently prosecuted by
wams
to
uf patriotism
fire
of the fact, and observing the Indians
emoluments or rewards, than the few
The
Dupes
blood.
regard to the sanctity of treaty obliga-
the Canadian Governor, adopted
and
keener appetite was
a
for
Punic, among the ancient Romans^
which reduced
-and Si.
enmity was more im-
and
of country had degenerated, and their
ral love
Freiic'u.
their
In-
grew bolder
and Indian Jaith among the English, became as proverbi-
;
ally bad, as the
The
;
for rapine,
spirits,
the French, they lost tions
crime
more depraved
their habits
II.
empty
one formerly
90 miles above Quebec. a small
situated at
dis-
consisting of several wig-
favored with a chapel, and accommodated
a cluster,
with a ferry over the St. Lawrence to Trois Revieres on the opposite shore.
same *'
That of St Franpois on the
river, six miles
nation."
It
from
its
mouth,
is
eastern
side of the
" a most eligible
sit-
soon became a large hamlet of wigwams, adorn-
ed with a chapel and parsonage-house, and furnished with a missionary and interpreter.
The French
draw
the
sh a lie red tribes to
thai place.
To dering
these places, the
Wawenocks,
French had the address
to
draw the wan-
the Sokokis, the Anasagunticooks, and also
the Algonquins, from Trois Revieres
;
who, intermingling, formed
what have since been called " the St. Franpois Indians."
At
these places, designed to be the rendezvous of the natives, the
command
French intended
to
their excursions,
and direct
*
man
He
died,
May
26, 1703.
their trade
their
and plunder
;
to plan
motions against the English fron-
Vaudreuil, late Governor of Montreal, was a
of abilities superior to any of his predecessors.
— 40
Univ. Hist. p.
136. t Jeffreys, p.
9-11.
Bouchetf 8 Canada,
— T. Hutchinson's Topograph.
p. 33S.
Description,
p.
6*7.
— Chap, tiers
of Maine.
ii.]
and likewise
;
to
make them
a state of neutrality with
the opening
war, to avail
the
At present the
were
latter
French, who were determined,
themselves of
Their remarkable successes,
vantage.
Mohawks,
a defence against the
case of war with that people.*
in
41 A.D.
1703.
in in
and every other ad-
this
in 'ihe late
were, in
one,
the eagerness of anticipation, only preludes to complete victories. In these
savage wars, the English settlers and their assistants The English colonists.
fought altogether on the defensive.
All parts of the country hold-
en under charter or purchase, or broken from a wilderness into fields
men
of partial cultivation
Here were
their only
whose attachments
Duty
ic ardor.
were considered by the
clearing,
from
it
in
fee.
homes, and even the birth-places of many,
to the
country were enlivened by natal patriot*
as well as inclination impelled
every hazard and every
at
or
of this generation, as rightfully belonging to them in
Though
sacrifice.
them
to
defend
torn or driven
the late war, they had determined not to abandon
their spirits
were not
fatally
it,
away it
;
broken, nor their courage subdued*
Personal exertion, intrepidity and exploits had often reflected imperishable honor even upon their defeats.
quently more genuine
when
with brighter lustre,
when
dead were mantled
in glory,
personal
the merit
and the
Valor
is
truth fre-
in
and human nature shines
;
is
Many
individual.
of the
though anxious
living,
for a
continuance of peace, were not backward to put on armor, whenever duty or country might require. the Indians were
left to
The}^ believed, however,
themselves, they would not
if
recommence
hostilities.
But no measures,
neither courtesies, presents, nor the sacred The
renewal of treaty-engagements, could keep ihem there
quiet.
was war between the English and French crowns,
impossible for their colonies to be at contrived by the French, was
now
rest.
A
arKpm.e-*^*
was
Jll^ tn^'i'jsh
it
plan of operations,
evidently maturing in Canada,
In the meantime, the impatient Indians were guilty of
some mis-
chief at Kennebeck, and a small party of Englishmen) unadvised, rashly committed an outrage at Penobscot, the late residence of
Baron de Castine.
—He
had himself, since the
last
war, gone
with his accumulated riches to France, never to return a son by a Tarratine wife, before mentioned, *
1
Doug. Summ.
p.
12.— 2 Hutch. Hist.
164-177.
Vol.
II.
6
p.
known by
j
leaving
the
Indians
When
name
131.— 5 Charlevoix's N. F.
p,
phiiider the
J;ou„eer 3 ouiiee ^'^sime's Castine hou.se.
THE HISTORY
42 A. D. 1703. of
'
Under
Castine the younger.^
ship, the foolish
men
and wicked
[VoL.
mask of pretended
tlie
visited his house, at
II.
friend-
'Biguyduce
[Castine], and besides perpetrating " great spoil," plundered
of
all
its
most valuable
transaction as a base treachery
it
Every one looked upon the
articles.
and when he complained to the
;
government, he was assured, that ample
restitution
made and
This act of violence
the ofienders severely punished.
occasioned
much deeper
hensions of to give
regrets,
should be
because there were daily appre-
from the Indians, and a general resolution
hostilities
them no provocation.
Outrageous, however, as
was,
it
the well-minded sufferer only complained and expostulated, with-
out avenging himself;
for
policy and sentiment
in
h:don, °
consistins;
°
of his wife and five children
; '
and
Hannah Parsons, a widow woman, and her young daughter into captivity. f At Berwick, five fell into an ambush one was killed, one wounded, and the other three made prison*
carried Mrs.
;
* Charlevoisc[Bd vo!.
year under Hertel, to
J\r.
F.
p.
assist the
—
men were sent out this Abpnaques, who made 15U prisoners— be»
423^9] says, 250
sides those slain, f
This
is
supposed
to
be the
g-lrl,
whom
the savagies on their march, in
1706, being linsnccessfiil in hunting^, pre[)arcd " a fire to roast, falling in their
way, supplied the
child's place."
— 2 Hutch.
when
a dog,
Hist. p. 149.
— Chap,
— 45
of Maine.
ii.]
Also, two houses were burned, and a descent made upon a.d. ers. Andrew Neale's garrison of the same place, which was under the
command
of Capt. Brown.
In
spot,
and as many wounded.
death
still
strolling
about Casco
men
the master and three in
and as
;
the
at
first
killed
and w^ounded two
shot,
then retiring to the woods, were pursued by Maj.
300 men,
March, of Casco, at the head of this
first
the boat.
The enemy At
Indians
a store-ship, intended for
was entering the harbor, they
the relief of the garrison,
others
and groans.
raising hideous shouts at his agonies
;
were
they
to retaliate,
and burnt him to
stake,
a
upon the
killed
Unable otherwise
lastened Joseph Ring, a captive, to
were quite
the assailants
this,
unsuccessful, being repulsed wnth a loss of nine
i703.
place he killed six, and
reprisals
in
war
the
;
—
made
Pegwacket.
as far as
more
prisoners of six
returning laden
with
—
the
p^^^my '.vj^'",?''
^^'''^i'-
considerable
Hence, the Legislatures of Massachusetts and New-
plunder.
Hampshire were encouraged
to offer a
Indian prisoner under ten years
one older or Capt.
Tyng
depth
ot
for
every
for
every
Moved by so liberal a premium, Falmouth,* and others, made excursions in the
for his
of
bounty of £20,
and twice that sum
;
scalp.
winter, upon snow-shoes,
enemy being engaged
though without success
;
Bmmtips
of-
scalps"
the
an expedition against Deerfieldf and
in
The government was
other western settlements.
determined,
if
keep possession of Saco, and therefore at the expense ^^^^ ^^^^ repaired. repaired the garrison near the falls. f
possible, to
of £164,
The
returning spring was a season of distressing melancholy-
aggravated by an early renewal of
Berwick was an important
pass,
hostilities
Major Mason was posted there,
with 95 Pequods and Mohegans, from Connecticut; at first a great terror to the
cover the settlement dar was shot dead,
;
for
when
barbarously mangled
;
and as
or alarms
enemy.
who were
Nevertheless, they did not
on the 25th of April, Nathaniel Meahis
body most
and about the same time, two
men were
at
work
in his field,
and
killed,
and one taken on the road
ty
on York, where they slew Matthew Austin near the garri-
fell
in
Wells.
Afterwards, a par-
son, without being able to do any more mischief in this * Sou of Col. t
Od
Edward
Tyng-.
the last day of Feb, 1704, 250 Indians, under
tel" destroyed Deerfield, carrying-
others
visit.
Mons. Artel or « Her-
away Rev. Mr. Williams, and many
See his " Redeemed Captive^*
Sfc.
\
Mass. Rec.
p. 2-3.
jy
^^q^
ll^Ji"',!^^
i^erwick.
[VoL.
THE HISTORY
46 A.I). 1704.
The
S'-asirri. expeditiou.
bold and persevering incursions of
towns wcstward
^^^^
upon the
iQQYs
and more
coast,
efficient
;
tlie
Nova
The
measures.
truth was, an attempt to
whence
Scotia achieved,
In
our evils flowed
all
furtherance of this plan,
and
coast,
550 men besides
a force of
given to the celebrated
lasting
practicable, discover and
if
in the interior, also to
was
officers
Church.^'
Furnished with
commission.
onel's
such being
;
and dismay, among the Acadian provincials.
carry retaliation
command
be car-
to
was deemed expedient
it
break up the head-quarters of the Indians,
Hence,
de-
hundred places,
means of acquiring a permanent and
to scour the eastern
first,
in a
enemy's country, and the conquest of Canada and
evidently the only
peace.
Maine,
induced the government to adopt wider plans
Policy required, that the war should
utterly vain.
ried into the
into
and the appearance of French priva-
fend and secure a frontier, open and exposed
was
enemy
II.
raised,
now holding
and the Col-
a
14 transports, 36 whale-
boats, and a scout-shallop, he sailed from Boston,
May
21, under
convoy of the Jersey and Gosportf ships of war, attended by
The
the Province galley.
particular
places of
destination
ap-
Mount Desert, Machias, upon the bay of Fundy ;
pointed him, were Metinicus, Penobscot,
Passamaquoddy, and the settlements likewise of the
Norridgewock on
enemy
his return,
at that place.
if
there were
a lodgment
His sick and wounded, he was
di-
rected to send either to the garrison at Casco, or to Pepperell's fort at Kittery-point.
„ Ho visits .
.
Pei.obscot bay.
The
little fleet
Penobscot bay
; '
came
to
anchor
at the
Island Metinicus,' out of
from which Col, Church sent out two boats to
one of the Green Islands, where three French residents, a father
and two sons, by the name of Lafavre, and dian,
were
all
taken into custody.
and obstinate, unwilling they were
terrified
by
to
The
also a
Canadian In-
prisoners were sullen
answer enquiries or act as
threats,
pilots,
or softened by promises
;
till
when
they became submissive, and' stated, that there were several families
of French and Indians, living about the margin of the Penob-
scot; and that Mons. *
John Gorham was
Gourdon and Sharkee, French
his ]/ieut. Col.
and Winthrop Hilton
officers,
his
who
Major. His
captains were John Brown, Constant Church, James Cole, John Dyer, John Cooke, Caleb Williamson, Edward Church, Joshua Lamb, Isaac
Mirick, John Harradon. t
One
Church's oth Expeditions
of 48 ^uns, Cypt. Smith; the other of 32
p. 165.
f^-uns,
Capt. Rogers,
— Chap, had
47
of Maine.
ii.]
them and the informants with ammunition A
lately furnished
and other necessaries, were then engaged
D. 1704.
building a fort at
in
Passamaquoddy. Church, under pilotage of the prisoners and one Young, taken purpose, proceeded with
out of Boston gaol for the
and whale-boats,
his transports
into
In this excursion, " he killed and took a considerable
scot.
among
ber both of French and Indians;" and
husband had gone
that her
She represented, France, where
to visit her father in
since leaving this country,
was
living
At Mount Desert, Col. Church joined
on a large
estate.
the three ships of war, Ranges
Through
at the
fear of alarming the
ed by day
head of
his
men,
whale boats,
in
enemy, he rowed by night and
never permitting a gun to be discharged, even
;
men went
his
Moose
Island,
her children Lotriell
and
;
restat
an
Church
Indian, provided he could be otherwise killed or taken.
and
ashore upon an Island, June 7th, probably
where they made prisoners of a French woman and and from the main, near her abode, they took M.
his
In ascending
family.
upon Gourdon and
the
they seized
river,
Sharkee and
family, and
his
domestics,
his
both lately commissioned from Canada, to form an expedition against the English.
rary cottages
;
They were
time dwelling
his
men hover around
of Gourdon, demanded the reason
tempo-
Church exclaimed, then
the dwelling
Because, as one replied,
:
some of the people within will not come out. or haste.
in
and that .of Sharkee was plundered of some valuable
Church, observing
articles.
at the
kill
In a
them.
fit
of passion
Instantly the
habitants received a discharge from the soldiers, and several
The
faults
infell.
and blemishes of eminent men, are often too severely
censured.
Church was highly provoked,
much
observe so
to
insubordination and exposure of his men, occasioned by the obsti-
nacy of those who ought
to
submit without resistance
;
yet he
could frame no excuses entirely sufficient, to satisfy a sensitive
He
public.
the
then proceeded as far as the
work of capture and
destruction
cer and resident, being the only one *
1
Coll.
N. H. Hist. Soc.
p.
;
falls
Chartiers,
of the river, a French
who escaped.*
32-35.-2 Hutch.
the
roast to
^
.
into the waters Passama-
and taking a fresh supply of provisions, hastened of the Passamaquoddy,
num-
the captives w^ere
baron de Castine's daughter, and her children.
he,
several of
the bay and river of Penob-
Hist.
p.
133.
in
offi-
skirmish
THE HISTORY
48 Next
A. D, 1704.
the
—
armament
sailed into the
[Voii. II.
bay of Fundy,
divided
of Fiuuiy.
the whale-boats against the remoter settlements.
;
the ships of
ing Minas [Horton] and two other
Church
ing several prisoners,
hending the strength of the
and the ships sailed Finisiies his
for
;
and
his return, finished his fifth
legislature, as a
a vote of public thanks.
Gov. Dudley
General Court represented, that
*
prisoners and a large
*
six men.'
This
the
in
expedition,
most destructive one officer
truly
wretched
;
:
The
of the
to the ill-fated
For
;
carried
by
their
into a treaty
the
were the people of Mas-
—
or
Their it
The government
I {,
f
into the fort the
Church's 5th Expedition,
towards
;
as
it
favored a lu-
which the Provincials would, by p.
152,]
owed who had
Port-Roj'al
Castine the young-er,
day before the English appeared io Casco foTt.'^—Penhallow.
killed a lad near
p.
NewMo-
Nothing surely could be more
deliverance to 60 Canadians and St.
The enemy "
at their
of
to observe strict neutrality both
French.
was a
frontier
was defended
with the Six Nations^ or
* According- to one account, [40 Univ. Hist.
the basin.
French and savage
settlements.
grateful to the inhabitants of that Province
thrown themselves
retaliation
this
crative trade with the Indians,
its
was a
Church was an was
New-England,
who had engaged
the English and
alt
in
cxpcnsc, both of livcs and means.
York had entered hawks
the
their condition, in view of winter,
New-Hampshire and Maine.
sheltcr to the rest of
war."
to
of only
loss
the season, f
Acadians.f
principal sufferers in this war,
Hampshire
'^"^
for his services,
next speech
degree averted from
great
a
in
it
enemy through
upon the English
sachusctts,
suffer-^
in his
and
commence-
they, until now, having never experienced the
Massaobu-
tile
reward
amount of plunder, with the
direful distresses so often brought,
coadjutors,
its
Port-Royal, and taken 100
who made thorough work, and
instance far enough
after
Church had destroyed
Col.
vicinity of
while
hostilities
'
it
waste the
Passamaquoddy, Mount
visiting
ment; receiving from the
Maine, the
then laid
expedition, about three months
the settlements
July 4, misappre-
called
Cliurch
fioii'^^^''^
*
and mak-
determined not to attack
fortress,
Penobscot and Casco on
last eastern
After destroy-
villages,"
rejoined the ships in the harbor of
Boston.^
^^"^"^'T ^hout Cliicgnecto ^^^^'"^j
"populous
But a council of war,
Port-Royal.
and there
war proceeding against Port-Royal, and
^|^'"'rch vis-
158-193.
Sometimes called the " Five ISations."
;
Chap,
of Maine.
ii.]
no means, have disturbed. plaint
in
Massachusetts
49
however occasioned great com- A D
It
in
On
Albany.
much
in the
from the frontier
for the plunder, taken
;
was
settlements eastward of Connecticut river,
the contrary, the French,
1705.
merchandize
often
who had
suffered so
wars with that fierce and savage people, soon saw
and realized the great benefits of the neutrality permitted no hostile movements to proceed
and therefore,
;
against any part of
New-York. Massachusetts,
in
her provident care of Maine, being
termined to keep possession of Saco, ordered, that the ing at the head of the tide be dismantled
was
originally erected only to
stiJl
de-
fort stand-
and abandoned, as
cover the Indian trade
;
it
J^efenceof scout' to
wock!^^
and that
the one at Winter-Harbor be strengthened and put in the best
Moreover,
posture of defence.
was four
when
in the winter,
who had been
feet deep, Col. Hilton,
snow
the
a Major in the late
expedition under Church, was sent by government with two hun-
dred and seventy men, including twenty Indians, to Norridge-
They
wock, on snow-shoes.
them; the season ever,
were the
for their
took twenty days' provision with
march was favorable
fatigues of a winter
dured with more fortitude and patriotism having only the pay of soldiers.
;
and
in
enemy
last
which he was
in
the government of
assisted
wigwams,
all
Nova
Scotia,
many
By this
which
John's, at the in
settle-
of the English were killed, and 140 taken prisoners.
;
and
in
felt
respective prisoners to
their
May, Gov. Vaudreuil despatched from Can-
who had been
taken captive the
Wells, and directed him to negotiate an exchange.
he was able
intelligence, that there
Vol. II
;
fj^^f^^jj^. land,
by a body of savages under the noted
Boston, Capt. Hill,
his arrival,
g^bgrcase
a bold
Canada and about Port-Royal
time the belligerents
be a burthen
in
in
St.
made
Great ravages were made among the
chief Assacombuit.
year
all,
nothing but
year, had greatly provoked the French
head of 550 men, collected
to
—
This and the successful enterprizes of
descent upon the Islands, Newfoundland and
ada
;
January, Subercase, late ruler of Placentia, having sue-
ceeded Brouillon
ments,
if
the officers themselves
a large chapel with a vestry" and deserted
they reduced to ashes.
Church and others the
and seldom,
Arriving, they were, after
disappointed, for they found none of the *'
;
campaign undertaken and en-
to
communicate
were of 7
their
to
last
On
mourning friends the
countrymen, about 117
in
of^p'S-Loners
THE HISTORY
50 A. D. 1705.
[VoL.
charge of the government, and 70 with the Indians.
II.
William
Dudley, a son of the Governor, and several other gentlemen were appointed commissioners to Quebec
70
prisoners, and yet only
and with them were sent
;
60 were obtained
Guilty
in return.
of detestable hypocrisy, Vaudreuil pretended, that " the Indians *•
were an independent and freeborn people
and that he had no
;
" right nor power to demand their captives in fact, well
known
to
whereas they were,
be entire dupes or vassals to his
How-
will.
son was protracted several
ever, the mission of the Governor's
months, under pretence either of effecting a farther exchange or of negotiating a neutrality
prisoners,
ance there, was
matter
in truth a
;
—though
his
of
continu-
of policy, to delay excursions
or sallies against the English frontiers.
Rowse was sent twice with a vessel and Nova Scotia but returned with only 24 deliverCaptivity. As deep suspicions shaded his conduct, he,
Afterwards, William
Vetch dnd
of truce to
cused oTil- flag licit
trade.
;
as principal, his friend
Nova
Scotia, and
Samuel Vetch, subsequently Governor of
two merchants of Boston,
charged with carrying on thither an
emy was
furnished with
were thrown
military stores
Yet they
into prison.
;
as accomplices,
trade,
illicit
were
whereby the en-
and consequently they
finally
escaped heavy penal-
only because the queen refused to sign the legislative acts,
ties,
passed for their punishment.
There were furthermore whispers,
Gov. DudJey uupopu-
concerned to
in this
that the
disgraceful traffic
;
wipe off the unjust aspersion, deepened as His notions of government,
prejudice.
of an aristocratic tincture
;
and he was
and esteem of the people.
eral love
Governor himself,
and he found
it is
far
Nay,
it
it
difficult
was by popular
true,
had too much
from having the genit
was expected,
at
one time, that he would be removed, and Sir Charles Hobby appointed to the executive chair.
The
Governor's influence was
certainly limited, and his unpopularity, a check to public ures, Urges the
oM"ema5
if
According
to the instructions
upon the General Court,
of the ministry, he again urged
to rebuild the fort at
Pemaquid, and
an? Repair- Contribute towards the repairs and support of fort vJfn[°"nd
Mary.
Mary*
meas-
not an embarrassment to the prosecution of the war.
to
William and
on Great Island opposite Kittery. But the House thought
Pemaquid
to
be
*
out of the usual road traversed by the Indians *
See ante, A. D.
17J0.
;
Chap,
of Maine,
ii.]
51
*
and being an hundred miles distant from any English planta-
*
tion,
*
or fishing boats, and could be of no great benefit
was merely a place of occasional anchorage
it
" to the enemy
—no
was great
—
*
pense of erecting
*
the charge of rebuilding
*
than the Province could possibly
it
and
;
would be greater
it,
—
sustain.'
" bridle
original ex-
£20,000
not less than
and supporting
—no
The
barrier to our frontier."
a. d. no6.
for coasters
In excuse for not
complying with the other proposition, the House replied, that the fort
was
her
it
originally built at the charge of
properly belonged
was only about £500 single
ent
towns
war
a
;
sum
not equal to the quota of several
trade and navigation on
the
all
of the
well as southern side
setts
had been
for
at great
expense
fortification in the
and of the parties employed
crown
the
while the
;
towards the support of the fencibles,
latter
northern as
the
an excise
Piscataqua, paid
river
towards the maintenance of the
shire,
and that Massachu-
;
protection of
New-Hamp-
procuring timber and masts
in
Province had
garrisons,
done nothing and sea-
the land-forces,
though as truly protective of her as of Maine or
Equally unsuccessful was the Governor
sachusetts.
to
Massachusetts, for one year's charge of the pres-
in
that
;
—
New-Hampshire, and
that the whole expense of the repairs
in
Masurging
upon the Legislature another proposition, which was the estab-
Governor's ^^'^'^^*
lishment of settled salaries, for the two the Province
;
the
first
executive officers of
Governor being usually allowed an annual
sti-
pend of only £500.
Through ° ally
the
summer and autumn, our
were continu-
cruisers
'
on the
eastern coast
nevertheless, the
;
,
French ^privateers
r^
Our vessel! seized and carried to
took seven of our vessels and carried them into Port-Royal. Pon-RoyaJ.
Nor could
Maine prevent j^j^^^^
the remaining towns and plantations in
or escape attacks and losses, though they had regular sentries, J*^^^^^'
nightwatches and videttes perpetually in service during the season, as itants, killed or
Creek,
five
many
carried
were
slain
as twenty-one or
into
captivity.
;
for
two of
they
their
lost,
inhab-
In Kittery, at Spruce-
and as many made captives.
Among
the
former was Mrs. Hoel, a gentlewoman of very respectable connexions
and
children
fine ;
wounded
accomplishments.
Enoch Hutchins
John Rogers, three weeks ;
and James Toby was
shot.
after,
lost his
was
Another party of eighteen
Indians, rushing from the woods, October 15th, seized rer's four children, near the garrison at
wife and
dangerously
Cape-Neddock,
Mr. Stoin
York.
A.D.
[VoL.
THE HISTORY
52 1705.
One, being too young
to travel, they
II.
knocked on the head, and
another they afterwards killed, probably amid torture, out of retaliatory revenge,
the assailants
according to savage usage
was shot down on
There were some apprehensions of an
A. D. 1706. in
the subsequent winter
;
;
because one of
his retreat.
attack upon the frontier
owing principally
to intelligence receiv-
270 men was
ed from Col. Schuyler of Albany, that a force of
preparing to march from Canada to some place unknown. fore
march, once a month, round the head of
for a circular scouting
the towns, from Kingston, N. Cruellies of first at Kiue'ry!^
them
There-
Governor Dudley, ever watchful of the enemy, gave orders
appeared rising
in
Maine,
H.
to
Salmon Falls.—The enemy
at Kittery,
April 29, where a party of
from an ambush, upon Mr, Shapleigh and
his son, as
they were travelling through the town, killed the father and car-
On
ried the' son to Canada.
a specimen of their
their
march, the savages exhibited
barbarous disposition
;
for
they
bit
off the
ends of their young prisoner's fingers, and to prevent their bleed-
There were
them with burning-hot tobacco-pipes.
ing, seared
likewise other instances of cruelty.
savage, undertook to hang
One Sampson,
Rebecca Taylor,
an overgrown
his prisoner, with his
around her neck and drawn over the limb of a
girdle tied
tree.
But, unexpectedly, his girdle broke, and she, half suspended,
This so exasperated the monster, that he was about hatchet into her head,
way, humanely Ravages
Much
in
^eufand^N. ^t Hampshire.
when
the noted
Bomaseen, passing
that
rescued the fair sufferer from her pains and perils.
mischief was perpetrated, this summer, by the Indians,
Dover, Exctcr, and Dunstable,
Q^Qton, Chclmsford, and Sudbury, the government resolved upon a
war.
fell.
plunge his
to
new
In a
lar soldier
tariff
New-Hampshire
in in
Massachusetts
;
and
at
and hence
;
more vigorous prosecution of
the
of bounties, for every Indian scalp, a regu-
was offered £10; a volunteer, without wages, £20,
and without being furnished with rations or supplies, so shy and seldom
seen were the savages, that
it is
£50 said,
;
yet,
every
Indian scalped, killed or taken, cost the Province £1000, The Indians
But, fortunately, the tribes considered the war a burden, and
tired of the
war*
.
were
.
,
heartily tired ol
selves.
as
was conceded by the French them-
Usually, a war of three years' continuance
for Indians.
revenge,
.
it,
—
In the present war, they
may have
is
long enough
gratified
their
certainly they had acquired no permanent advantage,
no considerable booty, or other emolument.
Thev had
not utter-
Chap,
town or plantation
ly destroyed a single
Hampshire
53
of mal\k.
ii.]
and those they had
;
The
nothing to the destroyers.
waste
men
white
New-
Massachusetts or
in
laid
in
of
a. d, 1706.
Maine, yielded
this
age were well
acquainted with the manner of savage warfare, and were more
The unhappy
than a match for their foes. tribes
wasted and distressed,
the beloved land ol their
liable
fathers
saw
natives
their
to be utterly extirpated from
and yet unable elsewhere
;
to
obtain a support for themselves and for their needy families.
A neutrality
was proposed by the Canadian French, which is have been rejected. Charlevoix* says, that Gov.
supposed to
fl^^i^ces
de>
'Jg*^^^'^^^
Dudley
in this
dilemma was 'much
affected with the
able to improve their lands,
*
the inhabitants, no longer
*
were continually ravaged by the Indians
way
an end
to put
*
only
*
French from Acadia.'
to their
;
which
and he thought the
was
distress,
remove the
to
the Governor had
It is true,
of Canada.
cries
great rea-
son to expect, that a complete conquest both of that country and
Canada would soon be attempted ment from England, the current only because of some changes
He was
in
since the promise of an arma-
;
year,
remained unperformed,
the political affairs of the realm.
exceedingly anxious to see Port-Royai reduced
tia,
and convert
it
an English Province.
into
serve to shew, that, though impolitic
management of
were
it
affairs
falsely said,
as
;
Nova Sco-
such an event would complete the entire conquest of
would
It
also
Governor's
the
towards that Province had cost
Massachusetts £30,000, he was successful as well as indefatigable in his labors and plans for the public good.
Another excursion eastward, was undertaken by the estimable ^ '
Colonel Hilton,
Casco with
in
January, 1707:
and a shallop was sent ^
stores and provisions for his forces, consisting of
,^a« A. D. not. .
to
^20
ton's success a^.^^'a^^k^*^'"^*
men.
So mild and
open the winter,
unsettled
that they
to the extent intended
;
was the weather, however, and
were unable
to prosecute
their
march
yet in pursuing an Indian track upon
which they struck, near Black-point,
tliey
surprised
and
killed
four savages, and took captive a middle aged
To
poose.
save her
life,
squaw with a papshe conducted them to a party of
eighteen, lying asleep on a neck of land not far distant and
guarded
;
all
of
whom
un-
except one, they killed about break of
* 2 Charlevoix's
N. F.
p. 313.
54
"I'HE
A.D.
day, and took the other a prisoner.*
1707.
er joy and triumph, because of the
coming across the Indians or Early
^
e?ped
K
the eastern service
Koyal.
and
;
at
Nantasket,
man
ford
May
period,
at this
23
command
the
The
13, in
difficulty,
of
finding their haunts.
2;ave
Wainwright and Hilton.
II.
This occasioned the great-
Governor raised two regiments
the
spring,
in the
...
tio^n
asiainst
[VoL.
HISTORY
embarked with the
officers
for
of them to Cols. troops,
convoyed by the Dept-
transports,
of war and the Province galley, and furnished with a
competent number of whale-boats.
March
expedition was given to Col.
;
The chief command of the who was well beloved by
the soldiers, and had behaved bravely in several scouts, and ren-
M
26 ^
counters with the enemy, though never tried
service
in
difficult
Arriving at Port-Royal, on the 26th, about
the present.
like
1000 men were disembarked
;
Subercase had
under him and retired
his horse shot
inhabitants took shelter in the
and a skirmish ensued,
which
in
while the
;
Misapprehending its force it " was more than a
fort.
and condition, a council of war supposed
match
for
our raw undisciplined army
embarked, June
went
officers
7,
to
in
and the forces
a disorderly manner.f
Boston
orders
further
for
ernor at
guard by the
his
ences of passion and chagrin, declared not a
man
should
termined, and at
and return
come ashore " on last
by
The Gov-
to the siege of
was able
Port-Royal.
He effect
to
Yet thinking
March
dient actually to supersede Col.
inciting influ-
another vessel arrived,
if
pain of death."
dint of effort,
re-
and some of the
;
transports put in at Casco, and one at Portsmouth.
Boston, being thrown off
all
Several of the
in
it
was dea rally
inexpe-
command,
the
the
Governor appointed three gentlemen of the Council, supervisors of the enterprize Aug.
10.
now
The
so boldly renewed.
before the town, August
10;
—but —
crippled and his health affected,
the
men were
heartened,-—the enemy's forces were increasing could inspire an union, firmness and
skill
killed
and
*The
as
_
t 2
;
and
dis-
and no means
;
yet the
no greater
army though
loss than sixteen
many wounded.
report of this affair with
little
variation from the truth,
culation at Portsmouth, on the mornings tant.
March were
sickly,
equal to the emergency.
In ten days the whole affair was at an end sufficiently mortified, really sustained
troops relanded
the spirits of
Penhalloxo's Indian
Charlevoix,
p.
War,
318-321.
p. 40.
it
was
in cir-
happened, thoug-h 60 miles
dis-
Chap,
of maine.
ii.]
consequence of
In
were much more able
unfortunate expedition, the French A. d.
this
renewal of their
to arouse the Indians to a
Beginning the
spoliations.
of three months,
55
made
last
of June, 1707, they,
As
Maine.
in
the course men
s
as-
bold advances against Kittery, Berwick,
York, Wells, Casco and Winter-Harbor, being towns and garrisons
in
1707.
All iheeas-
if
the surviving
all
actuated by personal malevo-
lence towards William Carpenter, a party pushed forward to his
dwellinghouse, in Kittery, and slew him and
men, riding
in
company with Mrs.
Littlefield,
York and Wells, were waylaid, August one,
who
field
had money
which,
said, the
Littlefield,
and carried
to
all
men
Lieutenant of the
The
Canada.
of military
were mere playthings
titles,
all
town, was taken
latter
But fishermen
rank, or character.
in their
Lurking about Casco,
clutches.
among
was on the A
this year,
Winter-Harbor. Here they attempted
of two shallops lying
at
By
waiting
in
50
till
the
garrison,
enemy was
ing at once, they threw the savage
flotilla
and
five
others were
near, and then into
all
fir-
great confusion.
Recovering themselves, (as the narrator says,) the Indians returned a discharge of musquetry, with so
much
men were
forced to abandon one of the shallops
the other,
we
prize,
spirit, ;
sails,
Indians, instantly taking possession of the
had up the mainsail, before ours was half mast
their
oars and paddles so dexterously on each
their
pursuit fearful.
;
;
dull
render sailor,
and when they saw they were
of their competitors, a number of them, in a dozen
canoes, by means of fishlines, undertook to tow her ahead. *
and little
and plied
side, as to
Their bark however, was a
and themselves unskilful mariners falling astern
that our
and entering
cut her cables, endeavored to spread the
The
They
usually appeared
three in a canoe."
severe
ca-saco!^'^
to take possession
anchor, while Capt. Austin, Mr. Har-
mon, John Cole, sergeant of the
put to sea.
Casco.
the Islands, and,
made an easy conquest of her and her crew,
Yet much the boldest movement made
on board.
lo.
After-
her.
21st of September, by a party of 150 Indians, coming to
Aug.
of them and taking the other two prisoners.
killing three
noes*
except
Mrs. Little-
savages seemed both to hate and
they intercepted a fishing smack, sailing as in like cases, they
all slain
fate.
same bloody hands plundered
wards Mr.
fear
10th, and
amount of $200 about her person, of
to the
Kittery.
on the road between
hardly escaped an equally expected
it is
Four
his family.
all
In
56
THE HISTORY
[VoL.
II.
A. D. 1707 the chase, a
breath of air breezed up, and by hauling her too near the wind, she came several times to stays, which greatly
—
A
retarded her progress.
on each other
parties
—
so smart
perpetual firing was
kept up by the and so near together were they at times,
;
was the skirmish,— and so daring the Indians,
they attempted to seize the blades of the oars, as our
that
men were and when
The engagement lasted about three hours ; men had scarcely five charges of powder left. Our loss was only one man, Benjamin Daniel, fatally wounded in his bowels; who exclaimed, I am a dead man^ but give me a gun ta kill one more before I go : ^Yet the brave man rowing.
the chase ceased, our
—
had not strength
The a^Iili'b'Let.
About nine of the enemy were
to fire.
l^st
Berwick
outrage of the Indians this season, in Maine, was at
where a small scouting party of them
;
they were returning from public worship. habitants, and a in
killed
many wounded.
well-fought skirmish, and twice as
in this
killed
two,
as
This aroused the in-
band of them, acquainted with
wait for them, and thus by having the
their paths, fire,
first
laid
threw them
into
such consternation, that they dropped their packs, contain-
ing
three, scalps
and some
articles
of value, and fled to the
woods. The misery of Maine.
'^^^^
^ "^^^^ trj^^S J^^^ could not even
They
Province.
without imminent hazard of their
crowding
cessity of tilling
lands, only
sentry-boxes.
their
remaining people of this stir
abroad, though well armed,
They were under
lives.
families into garrisoned
where they were
The lumber
situated
trade and
within call
fishery
the ne-
houses,
and
from the
were wholly
at
an end ;* the means of a livelihood were extremely slender
and
all
as the
anticipations fifth
j
of speedy relief appeared truly desperate,
summer had now
closed,
without any prospect of
peace. A.D>
But happily
170S.
tmTlef-
^"
for the
the next year,
Hutchins,
Province,
1708
who were
;
—
it
lost
these were
killed at Kittery.
only two of
its
inhabitants
Robert Read and David In the
succeeding year,
the people suffered comparatively nothing from the enemy's incursions
;
and therefore hopes began to be entertained, that the
days of extreme darkness and distress were passed. Various rumors however, during the current season continually * Gov. Dudley's speech, 170&.
Chap,
57
of maine.
ii.]
agitated the public
and scouts were
;
the
all
time
in
service, a.d. 1708
Spy-boats were also kept out along the coast between Piscataqua Alarming
At
and Winter-Harbor.
length, a story
was
sent into circulation,
army
of Albany, that there was a great
by way
collecting
in
the north, which consisted of Canadian volunteers and Indian
warriors from different tribes,
by the Abenaques and Tarratines
and that the whole force was
;
some
attack suddenly
to
frontiers.
This was a French manoeuvre
and bring them,
if possible, to
16; when one of them accidentally event,
which
all
considering an
The Mohawks
turned back.
ill
said
these na-
to unite all
concert agamst the
act in
The Hurons commenced
common enemy.
New-England
part of the
preparing
tives,
Hu-
as the Algonquins, the
and the St. Francois Indians—to be joined
Mohawks,
rons, the
—such
march, Julyj^,^jg
their
killed his
companion;
— an
omen to the expedition^ they their men were affected with
a contagious distemper, and refused to proceed.
Nevertheless,
Vaudreuil, nowise discouraged, sent to his officers fresh orders,
—
them
directing
to prosecute the
enterprise, even if
" the
Al-*
themselves should leave him
gonquins and St. Francois Indians
Therefore two hundred of them or more proceeded on
also."
;
and, though disappointed, in not receiving a re-enforcement at the place appointed,
from the Abenaques and Tarratines, they
made
surprised Haverhill, in the night of August 29, and
heap of
tern Indians If '
*
But they proceeded no
ruins.
we may
were quite needy, and
;
;
—
a friend,
to
for the
it
a
Haverhill
eas- A^ugSt^lg.
desirous of peace.
heartily
credit a letter of Subercase
maks were naked
farther
*
Mick-
the
and the Indians on the Kennebeck and Pe-
nobscot would be so too, had they not carried
*
the English, through the
*
river,
medium
on a trade with
of the natives about
where a pound of beaver was worth
a
Hudson
crown, and goods
* were sold " Thus," says Charlevoix, at a reasonable price.' " our own enemies relieved our most faithful Indian allies in their " necessities ; while they were daily hazarding their hves in our
" service."*
To weaken and
the enemy, or hold
him more
to retrieve the political character of the
effectually in check, ^-^1^^]^^,^'
government,
in
some ^^^^^^J'JJ*
measure
sullied
by former expeditions against Port- Royal
* 4 Charlevoix,
Vol.
II.
p.
100-20, 3d vol.
8
p.
452-65.
;
anoth-
Scotia.
A
[VoL.
THE HISTORY
58 was about
D. 1709. er
Of
be undertaken.*
to
Francis Nicholson,
this,
Lieutenant-Governor of Virginia, was appointed Commander-
late
in-Chief, and
Nova
Samuel Vetch, before mentioned, a
late trader to
Acadian settlements, was
Scotia, well acquainted with the
In England, they had obtained the queen's
Adjutant-General.
promise, to send over several ships of war to aid
But none
prise. Treachery
hawks.^°
II.
hawks, though they had
lately joined the English,
One
ous and treacherous.
—
'
and French are each a great people
'
destroy the other, the conqueror will strive to there
was a
;
the English
one of them should
if
make
us slaves.'
threw skins
report, that these Indians
where the English soldiery had
into the stream,
Mojeal-
You know
*
this,
—The
were both
of their speakers in a great assembly
previously holden, said with boldness,
Besides
the enter-
in
the whole project failed,
arriving,
encamped,
lately
near lake Champlain, which gave the water poisonous qualities.f In February, the Governor says,
Governor's scouts.
my
former usage,
'
twenty days since, accord-
marched a scout
150 men from
of
«
ing to
*
Casco bay
*
dians in the Province of Maine, in order to keep
'
their dwelling-places,
and convince them to defend
to all the old
I
settlements or lodgements of the In-
them
their
French, were unable
ed them with ammunition, and assisted them
*
against us, about thirty years.
'
French
*
tants,
*
we
«
shall
to the
Romish
and such
shall
— So
them from
masters, the
though they have suppli-
'
'
;
new
on the war
to carry
bigoted,'
adds he,
'
are the
religion, so inveterate against all protes-
their colonial contiguity to
never be long
until
at rest,
New-EnglancJ, that
Canada and Nova Scotia
constitute a part of the British
The
Empire.'
Indians
themselves might be easily rendered tranquil, were they removed
from French influence sue^fj?*^'^"^ P®^> Councillor for
Judge upon the su- Sa?ada-
equally distinguished for his talents, learn-
Councillor for that Province administration.
a
But he was the successor of Mr. Cooke,
ing and integrity.
iries
ic. civil offi- P"*^'"
appointed by the Archbishop of Canterbury, were such
discussion before a
investigate
the subject,
enquiry into his qualifications was too
[VoL.
II.
the election,
or
THE HISTORY
104 A. D. 1721. late
;
it
should have been made,
his
it
deed
to
must decline
ever, before
if
He
certainly before he was sworn.
said he
was
any individual member, desirous
to lay
it
upon the speaker's
table,
see
to
as
was well known, there were various claimants
it
willing to exhib-
House voted
the
title.
to
it
Sag-
insufficient, this
answer,
and
to
produce
be an
affront,
his
refusal
being a non-proprietor
his
But
was void.
resolved, that his election
in
made and
affidavit that
official
and
;
afterwards every non-resident Councillor elect,
that
said,
is
and
;
consequence of the
Council's non-concurrence, he held his seat through the year it
for
;
Dissatisfied entirely with
abundant evidence of
his deed,
but
;
to tracts in
adahock, and the House might vote his own deed
and prejudice the
it
required
he was a proprietor, before he took
seat
his
oath at the Board.
Party-spirit
was yet only one of the many causes, which ren-
So many were the fears of a new settlements were un-
dered the current spring gloomy.
rupture with the Indians, that few or no
dertaken -inTo^^r
move.
gjjy^^,g
P.rociama-
Pmio!*.j
plantation
lots
to the
were ready
was long known by
Salmon Fall
river,
committee's report the preceding
assignment
for
be surveyed six
to
miles square, and located on the easterly side of
year.
'large
in
colonies ;'f and therefore resuming the sub-
its
in
October
and the
;
now
Indian name, Tow-wohy
Lebanon.'^ In coosequencc of the frequent wars with the natives, the gov-
General leuieinoui
was sedulous
f^J'nment
defensible
ments, prescribed to
to
have
all
new
compact and
settlements
and as the general terms, conditions and require-
;
in the location
of this town, form a leading case
which subsequent grants with a few alterations refer; the par-
ticulars are here stated
:
severally, were surveyed
one engaging clear
from
to build
In general, about CO
and
settlers,
—
each
and within
three yearsy to
for mowing and
tillage ; also
to take actual possession,
five to eight acres fit
many
as
to
offered
of 100 acres,
lots
a dwellinghouse at least 18 feet square, and 1 feet posts.
Collectively, they were also required, within five, or six years, to
build a meeting-house
wise in
;
settle
a learned orthodox
[^or
Protestant']
and make provision for his comfortable support. Likethe allotments and appropriations of this and other new
minister
;
townships, there were usually reserved three lots for public uses,
namely, the ministry, schools and the first settled minister tvhich there was, at a subsequent period,
tion of a lot
for
the future disposition
of government.'^,
* Ante, A. D. 1727. I
Post, A.
-to
added another reserva-
t 14
D. 1767.— Lebanon was incorporated
Mass. Rec.
that year.
township of land, and well situated for lumbering";
'is
it
p.
367-8.
It is
a g-ood
bordered on the
river several miles. \
Compare
the coaditions prescribed, A.
1>,
1733,
— in 14
Mcut, Rec,
p.
— Chap.
of maink.
vi.J
Next
181 brave officers and
the services and claims of the
who had
often mentioned,
diers, so
country,
;;
came
fought the battles of their
There were 840 men,
before the General Court.
belonging to Massachusetts, expedition,' as
was
it
who
took arms
called, against king
;
would be an
distinctions
all
—
or
heirs
their
shares, of
The
1
In the
in
;
whose
a legislative
comtask
equal provision for
to
them gratuitously
120
there would be
rights,
every township, besides public
or
lots.
bounties conferred and grants appropriated, were to be per-
fected whenever associates, to the
and
make
and offered
division,
75 acres each
^^'''•^
and ordered seven* new townships,
;
six miles square, to be laid out for settlement.
^"'^
Narraganset
'
invidious, ungracious
therefore the General Court resolved to
them
^^^1^^,^?^^.^
few survivors from those deceased.
distinguishing the
To make
the
in
Philip's forces
names and places of abode were reported by mittee
sol- a. d, 1733.
actually
Terms.' and two
township,
a
settle
number of
Five of these townships were
Maine
in
;
'
—one
One," [now Buxton']
;
was
sixty,
according
called
would unite the
to
'
General
Massachusetts,'
^^'a^ragan-
" JVarrasranset JVumber °
seven, or buxton
laid out in
the other, " JVarraganset
JVumber Seven"
set
^^^^
No. oue
Gor-
[now Gorham]. Encouraged by the
liberality
of the Legislature, numerous peti-
A. D. 1734.
next year, applied for bestowments of the public boun-
tioners, the
The representatives from Marblehead, stated, that their townsmen were straightened in their accommodations,' and were desirous to settle a new town in Maine, if they could obtain a grant. ty.
'
Hence, a township of 25,600 acres was surveyed next spring, on the eastern
bank of the
wherein 63 compact ten acre-lots were
them, the
to
Presumpscot
river
laid out to
as
many
set-^
and subsequently to each one a lot of 120 acres. This^^JJ^"^*^'^ plantation, called " JVew-J\larblehead" [now Windham'] had not Windham, tiers,
a rapid growth
;
for five
mills in operation, or
years elapsed before the inhabitants put
began a meeting-house.
Being then
dis-
turbed by the Indians, they erected a large block-house, whither
they and their families might retire for safety, and defend themselves, with the aid
269-281-367-8
bonds of
;
of two swivels furnished them by the pro-
with Resolves E. Lands, JJarchy 1785,
£20 were
p.
27-30
—At
required of the settlers for performance of terms
— they were never sued. See Doug. * JVinc, were in fact granted— but only seven taken.
they were of no use
1
Summ.
first, ;
but
p. 514.
Another
A. D. 1734 prietors. t^wn
[VoL.
THE HISTORY
182
Berwick and Tow-woh, was
tract, adjoining
about the same
^^^^
upon the general terms,
time and
"or
Sandford.
other
and afterward called
associates,
II.
'
Phillipstowrij^
now
to
the
town of Sandford.* Grants
to
In the present
^ood mood of
were equally successful
the
General Court, individuals
Samuel Jordan of
in their applications.
Biddeford and Christopher Baker, who had been a long time
Canada
captives in
;f
Richard Cutis of Kittery, who was shot
ten years before and lay twelve months sick of his
—who had
Ruth Lee Royal
Major Converse, who had
the children of
;
war
father in the third Indian
who had been
wounds;
her husband in the attack upon Port-
lost
by the savages
a great sufferer
a great number of others had
their
lost
and Richard Tozier of Berwick,
;
lots
;
—
all
of these and
from 150 to 200 acres given
them, which they had a right to select from any of the unappro-
Any
priated lands in Maine.
reaved of husband or father,
criples or captives
upon request, sure of receiving the
Nay,
made
in consideration ;
and
the poor were supported through the year, from
the
of services rendered between forty and
public lunds.J
At
for consideration
granted. §
also
fifty
years before
the officers and soldiers in the
length,
da expedition, of 1690, preferred
committed
were
^be-
bounty.
legislative
there were instances, where gratuities were
some of
— —were,
persons severely wounded,
—made
All
;
Cana-
which were
their memorials,
and the second year, their requests
these grants were obtained through
" the Committee of Lands ;" whose report was at this period, and in these instances, considered a sufficient reason for a legislative Proprieties
formed.
grant.
^^^^"^
At
the
first
new townships were managed as and several in common
u proprieties''^ or corporate tenancies acts
were passed
officers
But
;
for calling proprietors'
enforcing their votes
these
movements
Baker was
post— incorporated.
a prisoner 25 years
\
fitate
:
and allowed 500 acres. Perhaps p. 51-83.
uel Pool; others.
this
was
paupers.
The men who were
Wm. Rand
regulating their
Province of Maine, and some
\2 Resolves of General Court, A. D. 1734, the origin of
;
and collecting assessments.
in the old
* See Sandford, A. D. 1768, I
;
;
meetings
at the heads of these petitions were, Isaac Little,
Samuel Wright; Nathaniel Bowman SamEbenezer Hunt; Stephen Hall; and Joseph Sylvester, and
;
Samuel Greaves
;
;
Chap,
183
of Maine.
vi.]
of a similar character in that of Sagadahock, especially upon the a.d. Indians
river St. Georges, began to disturb the
contents once
had access the
man
and
;
excited, were always aggravated,
their dis-
For though they might fawn upon with a profusion of thanks, who would put
at the time,
they would,
lips,
they had opportunity,
if
surely abuse him, while they were under the influence of the toxicating draught
some
J^me jell-"
whenever they""^.
to ardent spirits.
the cup to their thirsty
of
1734.
and when sober, they were apt
;
to
in-
be jealous
possible imposition, and as often meditated revenge
for
suspected as real frauds, practised upon them during the suspension of their reason.
Nor would they
confine their
with the white people, entirely to the truck houses. travelling traders, visiting
a barter with them
the
new
settlements, wickedly courted
The Governor was moved
gains and immediate emoluments.
upon
own pecuniary
having regard only to their
;
this fearful subject
—and
traffic
Greedy or
he stated
the General
to
Court,
that by the "frequent complaints received from the frontiers,
great abuses were committed on our Indian neighbors, by in" toxicating them with excessive quantities of rum :" and ad-
*'
—
ded,
*
if
there be not a speedy check given to this growing wick-
*
edness, what good can result from
*
the government
*
their
instruction ?*
all
their benefit, or
for
—Reminding
sums expended by
the
by the Scottish society
them
also
of
the
war
for
lately
*
entered into by several of the European princes, and the great
*
preparations making
May
31,
'
it
was
it
into a
for
extensive campaigns,' he told them,
their duty to look into the state of the Province,
good posture
*
and put
*
fortunately be again visited with the scourge of war.'
By
of
defence
in
case
the extension and increase of settlements,
avenues were opened to the king's woods.
when informed of
the recent trespasses
proclamation, declaring that
made
the General Court,
be carried
to
all
it
should un-
more convenient
Hence
the Governor,
committed, issued a new
the laws of Parliament, and of
punish that class of offenders, would
into rigorous execution.
He
went so
far
afterwards,
as to threaten the Province with his Majesty's indignation, if the forest-trees of his royal
To
domains were not better preserved.
the salary question, which had so often and so highly agi-
* The Society bad Summ. p. 231,
a
missionary upon
tlie
eastern frontiers.
—
1
Dou^.
Governor's jjl'^^st tres-
P***^"-
THE HISTORY
]84 A.D.
^^'^^g®'^^"^ gave a most favorable turn
;
II.
wisdom and good
tated the people and their representatives, his
1734.
question put 1
[VoL.
having prevailed with
to rest.
the king to relax his instruction, so far as to permit the incumbent
Paper meney coHSider-
and here the unhappy controversy rested.
ed,
bills of
Governor
what sums the Legislature might grant him
to accept
.
credit,
was
.
a subject,
The
dress or abilities to bring the General Court into his views.
time set was
now
issued would
fall
only seven years
due
These
was expressly forbidden. country
;
in
" which had been long three years were
shut,
all
at a
remoter day,
lava, overflowed the
New-England
that did
" Massachusetts treasury,
share of them.*
full
which had been
all
bills, like
nor was there a government
not send out a
"or
—when
and any made payable
;
was opened, and the debts of two
paid, at the
same
time, in this- kind of
" paper ;"f which was made by law a tender in payment of debts. Still they were in effect like coin of base metal, than one part fine to two of alloy; for 10 lars
—were now worth and would
As
up
hoard
them, and
his
nay,
it
was impossible,
and breadstufFs
to
—no man can know
is
no
Nothing could be more
their face
;
—
and without some
;
safety either in barter or trade
The
faith
bills
owing
to
^^q^^
Sheepscot.
1
Doug. Summ. Hutch.
At Pemaquid he had
he treated with great courtesy
summer, the
a talk with ;
and
from
several
whom
assurances of their wishes for a continued
he received fresh
^ 2
this
Passamaquoddy, Machias, Pemaquid, Damaris-
visitcd
*
expensive wars,
redeeming them.
^n excursion into the eastern Provinces
Govcrnor
whom
much
of the Province was,
agreeably to the nominal
^but inability,
plausible apology or plea for not
Indians,
diffi-
of labor
the worth or value of his property,
pledged to pay the
true,
amount upon
abroad
it
to graduate justly the price
less that of his debts or dues.
The Cover-
of the bills.J
of merchandize, of
articles
deceptive currency
this
unchanging standard, there
the Eastern country.
£10
and gold, or send
silver
which there was a great scarcity.
was a
less
Spanish-mill'd dol-
bring about
and cash or precious metals became
it is
all
were constantly depreciating, the holder would pass
they
cult,
p. 528.
IJisl. p.
Ml.— The
loan
to
York county was £100,000.-2
Resolves, printed July, 1735. J
Governor's Speech,
chase
6*.
:
But paper money, or about which he had not the ad-
May, 1734.— He
of lawful money.
says 16*. of these
bills will
not pur-
Chap,
of Maine.
vi.]
186
though there were traders on the
peace;
given some
who had
frontiers,
A. D. 1734.
In his interview with the inhabitants of
offence.
these parts, they were able to confer with mutual satisfaction and interest
upon Dunbar's
recall, for
they had
all
viewed his agency,
as a public annoyance.
At
the next Court of Elections, the Legislature, June 10, ap- a.D. 1735
pointed, for the
and October,
at
be holden
to
urer,
:
—The
;
"alf-sbte
and Jeremiah
County Treas-
the
and the Notary-Public, Richard Cutis,
;
This year, a new valuation of -enumeration of
upwards, the
all
within
the male
jr.
of Kittery.
the taxable property,
all
and Anew vala
inhabitants,
sixteen years old and
were
taken and completed,
Province,
the
purpose of apportioning the public assessments upon
the several towns. the
Moody
John Leighton
Sheriff,
Pleas, Falmouth
January
Daniel Simpson; the Collector of the excise, Joseph Hill,
of Wells
for
alternately, in
The Judges were Samu- "^'^^
York and Falmouth.
EL Came, Timothy Gerrish, Joseph
MouLTON
Common
time, the Inferior Court, or
first
and Sessions of the Peace,
As
it
may be
gratifying
proportions of £1,000, set to the
to
have a view of
several counties in the
Province,* and to the several towns in Yorkshire, they are sub-
To
jomed.
£
York,
Berwick,
5 17
Wells,
4 19
Falmouth,
6 12
Biddeford,
Scarborough,
2 04 2 01 4 02
North-Yarmouth,
1
Arundel,
£ * (bounties
a (« (i
there remained a most difficult duty to be performed.
This was the appointment of the chief military experience, easily
found,
Gentlemen of
officers.
as well as military talents,
had they been
would have been selected and preferred.
command
the person appointed to
Pepperell, Esq. of
the expedition, w^as
Kittery, then Colonel of the
ment of the Yorkshire
militia.
But
William
western regi-
His new commission gave him
the rank of Lieutenant-General.*
He was
blemished reputation, and engaging manners
a ;
merchant of un-
extensively
known
and quite popular throughout the Provinces of Massachusetts,
New-Hampshire and Maine. ties,
These were considered as qualicommander of an army, formed of own countrymen, who were to quit their domestic
highly desirable, in the
volunteers, his
connexions and employments, and engage *
1
Doug:
Siwiin. p. 350.
in
a hazardous
enter-
—The enlistments of volunteers began, Feb.
2d.
Chap.
of
viii.J
prise of
unmeasured extent, of uncertain
who knew how
sage veteran, victory.
Had
these been
deemed in
was no a.d.
There
issue.
conduct the enthusiastic ranks in
;
1745.
to
arms were out of the question. expedi-
indispensable prerequisites, the
laid aside
possessing
quarter,
to
and experience
Skill
must have been
tion
225
mainf,.
for there
was no person
in
this
any eminent degree such qualifications.
Pepperell had a martial turn of mind, which was increased, by
most exposed
living in a part of the country, the
great lustre
to
the ravages
His patriotism now shone out with
of the French and Indians.
could
for nothing but a zeal for his country's good,
;
have carried him from the scenes of domestic enjoyment, and extensive
business
—from
the head of the Provincial
the highest honor his fellow citizens could
Council,
bestow upon him, to
He
the fatigues of a camp, and the risques of uncertain victory.
was much beloved
know and
both enlist
;
and
was necessary
it
that the
men
should
love their General, or they would not cheerfully
under him, nor yield him implicit obedience.
he re-
In giving consideration to the appointment offered him,
quested the famous Mr. Whitefield,
preaching '
Maine, to give
in
who was then
his opinion of the enterprize.
scheme
(said he) I think not very full of all will
*
eyes of
*
success, the
*
flections
*
with envy,
;
therefore, in
*
you
felt
if it
;
will
utter
for a
complaints and rewill
look upon you
You ought your glory. go with " a single eye," and then
to eclipse
my judgment
the sentiment
to
He
proportioned to your necessities.'
deep sense of the Divine Providence actions of his
to influence all the
life.
Mr. Whitefield
was likewise urged by the Commissary, another of to give a motto for the flag
suggested this
The The
and should you not meet with
be otherwise, numbers
and endeavor
will receive strength,
seemed
;
widows and orphans
—and
*
be upon you
'
encouragement.
WhitefieW's
and
itinerating
;
to which, after
his
friends,
some hesitancy, he
— " Jsil desperandum, Christo, Duce;'*^ —which being
adopted, gave the expedition the air and popularity of a
modern
jje suggests ^^jj^gj^-'®"*
crusade.
The second
in
command was Samuel Waldo,
Esquire,
was commissioned with the rank of Brisadier-General. "
who
gentleman was a native of Boston, son of Jonathan Waldo, rich
the
merchant of that place, and very extensively interested
Muscongus VoL.
II.
patent.
At that 29
time,
g^^^g, Waido, 2d in command. a
This
in
Samuel was Colonel-com-
A. D. 1743.
[VoL.
THE HISTORY
226
II.
mandant of the eastern Yorkshire regiment, and the representaHe was in the prime tive of Falmouth in the General Court. of
man
a
life,
excellent understanding
of
and great
activity.
His knowledge of men and books was much improved by travelling
and
;
his undeviating
integrity,
turn of
his military
mind
and independent manners, rendered him a highly respected com-
mander. The
The
Colo-
"on!'Haie,
Richmond, &,°Dwi1'ht.
Colonels in the
were
troops,
Gorham and Dwight.* Jeretnitth Moultoti, the third in command, was a native inhabitant of York at that time, a member of the Provincial Council, a Judge
—
of the it is
Common
Pleas and county treasurer of Yorkshire
was
believed, he
good
abilities,
been
in
the public service
acquired
war
;
He
of Pepperell.
was a man of
of amiable, popular and retiring manners, and true
His private character was highly estimable.
courage.
and
;
also a Lieutenant-colonel in the militia reg-
command
iment, under the
much
;
of the whale-boats
artillery.
had
Norridgewock during the
and possessed considerable military
ed the train of
He
was acquainted with Indian warfare
credit in taking
Gorham had charge
;
;
last
and experience.
skill
and Gridley command-
To Mr. Vaughan was
given a Lieut.
Colonel's commission, without any particular
command, he pre-
ferring the trust of such special duties, as the
Commander-in-chief
might consider
A
Large en-
there, so itants. f
ger
;
his
adventurous genius best suited to perform.
selection of the chief officers
mentn^""^ afFords an Maine.
Maine and Massachusetts
Moulton, Hale, Willard, Richmond,
answer
to the enquiry,
and several others from Maine,
why
enlistments,
were effected
much in disproportion to the number of eastern inhabThe Indian wars had enured them to hardships and dan-
and now, no
own exposed
less the
example of
situation, inspired
to take the field,
against
their ancestors, than their
them with an
enthusiastic
ardor
such confederate enemies as French
There was everywhere
a
concurrence of favorable circumstances; and some of tliem,
in
papists
and blood-thirsty savages.
* Samuel J^Ioore was Lieut. Colonel of the
New-Hampshire reg^iment, men; Siwo/i Loi/irop, Lieut. Colonel of Connecticut regiment, 51G men; and Richard Gridley^ Lieut. Colonel of the train of artiller}'.
—
804
\ " Many of the settlers about Georges' river, enlisting- under General " Waldo, were at the taking of Louisbourg where they continued with ;
*'
their families several years, and
JIS. J^arrative,
p. 10.
some never returned."
— C.
Eaton
t
— Chap,
227
of Maine.
viii.]
dependent upon human action or
nowise
The
promoti\re of ihe enterprize.
were
foresight,
greatly A. D.
174J.
February,
winter, especially
^JJ.®*J^',^g'"^j
was very mild weather
The
lisp *
and though some of them had heard of the present ex-
;
news
it
Canada
to
;
French gave no
the
improbable an undertaking
to the report of so
of
reached Nova Scotia, or Louisbourg.
any one circumstance,'
to
'
and not a
;
In short,
use the language of Douglass,*
*
—
if
had
*
taken a wrong turn on our side
*
taken a right turn on the French side, the expedition must have
*
miscarried.'
;
or
if
any one circumstance had
In less than two months, from the day the General Court re-
army of 4,000 men were naval squadron, consisting of 13 ves-
solved to undertake the expedition, an
prepared to embark ;f and a sels, besides transports and guns,J was ready to
Snow,
Shirley,
Nantasket.
at the
He
store-ships,
—
carrying about
and entering, the 24th, on board the
;
head of the armament, he put
was directed
to
to sea
for
from
proceed to Canseau, there build
a battery and block-house, deposit his stores and leave two
Thence he was
panies to guard them.
200
Pepperell received his instructions
sail.
from Shirley, March 19
army
com-
with the fleet and
to sail
Chappeaurouge-hay^ easterly of Louisbourg, arrive
Summ. p. 336. From Massachusetts and Maine,
in
* 1 I
General Wolcot
Connecticut, 516 under 3,250 men and New-Hampshire, 304 under Col. Jloore, excluiive
;
of commissioned
ofi&cers.
—2
were before the town.— A^o/.
;
Hutch. Hist. 1, p.
p.
371.
Douglass
says, 3,600
350.
guns. \
the expcdi.
Indians had not molested the eastern fron-
pedition, and carried the
heed
and the
;
out-door labor was done with
in general so pleasant, that
unusual ease. tiers
and rivers were open
the harbors
;
These were, Brig Massachusetts, Tyng,
24 20 20
Ship Caesar, Snelling^ " Shirley Galley, Rouse,
guns,
Ship (hired of R. Island,) Capt.
)
Connec-
i^st26.
26, in the vicinity of Pemaquid.
land's habi-
pleasures of rural retirement, remote from the garrison, on a
waste.
he had rendered
plantation industry,
was
flourishing
at length assailed
killed his cattle, laid entirely
wounded him and
and
fruitful
by
his
by the savage destroyers
waste his habitation and
fields,
them half-dead.*
his son, leaving
;
It
own who and
was ob-
servable, however, that very few comparatively, thus far, in this
The
Indian war, had been killed on either side.
knew how
to avoid
parties
each others' devices and attacks
;
well
and the
English, finding the great advantage to be derived from keen-
numbers of them, and were
scented, or furious dogs, kept great
followed by them
About
Canada and Nova-Sco-
as
and also
this time, the attention of
Provincials tia,
in their scouts,
—seemed
to
the
in
chasing the enemy.
Indians, as well as of the
be drawn towards Canada and Nova Sco-
armaments and expeditions, of uncommon magnitude,
were expected soon
to
proceed
Gov. Shirley, Sept.
thither.
of'Nova°"
resented to the General Court, that
Scotia.
t
'
9, rep-
there were probably in
Nova
Scotia a mixed population of 30,000,f consisting of Acadians, *Jour. of House Rep. 1747. f
Query,
if this
plantations of S. p. 152.
estimate be not too hig-h
Minas only, about 7,000
?
—There were, however, in the — Haliburtori's
souls in 1750.
1
JV*.
— Chap, *
of maine.
ix.]
French and Natives,
Roman
all
247
Catholics,
6,000 able to bear arms and take the field *
were ripe
*
opportunity
'joined by the great body of Indians
if
these were
Penobscot and Kenne-
at
*beck, they they would, under the auspices of the French, *
—then overrun
Nova
*
Hampshire, and scarcely meet with an
effectual check, even
and
troops raised in Massachusetts, Rhode-Island, shire, to
embark
What
JYova Scotia."
less or
what
at
for the
New-Hamp-
" drive the enemy out of
Annapolis, and
for
New-
Provinces, and
the eastern
Orders therefore were issued
*the river Merrimack.'
make
and of the whole country of
themselves masters of Annapolis
*
Scotia,
could
else
be attempted
?
Since through long suspense,
fearful
and delays, the public
had now been suffering most se-
verely,
two
full
ly frustrate the
nor
official
onists
At
at
large
The
months.
expedition to
in a
this juncture, the
apprehensions, inactivity
lapse of the season must itself short-
Canada
orders arrived from
were involved
;
—
neither military forces,
England
;
—
therefore the col-
sad dilemma and deep concern.
whole country was thrown
into the utmost j^yrWai
consternation, by the arrival, Sept. 12, of a large fleet and at
Nova
Scotia,' from France,' under the
command
Duke
of the
D'Anville, a nobleman of great experience and ability. in
sent to North America.
were
The
Chebucto Harbor, [now Halifax.']
fleet,
He
when
it
an-
put
from Brest, 90 days before, was the most powerful one ever
to sea
1 1
It
ships of the line,
fireships, tenders
20
frigates,
70
sail
;
—of which
there
5 ships and brigs, and 34
and transports; having on board 3,150 well
ciplined troops, and
and military
consisted of
immense
stores.
dis-
quantities of provisions, ammunition,
The Duke had
previously sent Constans with
three ships of the line and a frigate, to convoy the trade at Hispaniola,
who, according
to orders, afterwards visited
Chebucto
;
but
hearing nothing of the Admiral, after waiting a long time, sailed for
France.
The Ardent and Mars,
both of 64 guns, being shat-
tered in a storm, put back for Brest, and were finally captured also the Alcide, another 64, receiving lor the
West
Indies.
The
forces from
great damage, bore
time had elapsed for the arrival of the
;
away
Canada, about 1,700 men,
regular troops, militia, volunteers and Indians, fleet
;
all
waited
fit
army 1^^-?"°^^
^
chored
i74C.
whom
the most of
great fears were entertained,
and
;
;
could furnish A. D.
and only waited a favorable or safe
a revolt,
for
who
till
the
and then they com-
French fleet under Duke d'Anviiie.
[VoL.
THE HISTORY
248 Ai D. 1746.
menced
their returning
them
sent expresses after to
march
had
1,270
lost
be unable
sickly, as to
400 only were overtaken
From
admit of their return.
7 transports, a landing was that they
yet
;
plicated misfortunes and disasters so
cil
of war on the 18th,
return to Brest
;
was found, were so
These com-
least fatigue.
overwhelmed the Duke,
to his arrival,
he died.
that
In a coun-
the vice-admiral proposed an immediate
but a majority joined de
Canada, the
or of
it
the voyage, and the rest
undergo the
on the fourth day, subsequent
when
;
time
in
and 6 or
three ships of the line,
at length effected
men on
to
The Duke, however,
Quebec.
to
II.
third
command
in
;
la
Govern-
Jonquiere,
—concluding
to
attack
Death of Aunapolis, before the fleet left the coast. Hence, the chagrin, the two chief \ . French offi- this occasioned, in connexion with the other disappointments, ^
^
threw the vice-admiral
^
.
and he
into the deliriums of a fever,
fell
on his own sword.
malady among the
Sickness of the French,
^gj.^ mortal,
troops, proving to be a scorbutic fever
continued to rage with such violence, that 1,130 of
the troops died after ing thither in great
Meanwhile the Indians, flock-
encampment.
numbers
arms, ammunition and clothing,
for
took the infection, which preyed upon them,
more than a ed to the An
English expect-
fleet
It
third part of the
tribe at the river St.
was reported,
it
from
October
11.
would be followed to
fleet
letters received, sent
the fact to Admiral
carried off
John.*
French
by a large squadron of English ships
^jj^gpigg,
believing
that the
it
till
whole Mickmak race, and extend-
Townsend
at
and Shirley,
;
an express to communicate
But
Louisbourg.
it
was
inter-
cepted, and opened in a council of French officers, Oct. 11, and
found to read thus
Admiral Lestock, with a
fleet
of IS
sail,
has
been ordered to JVorth-America, and may be hourly expected. —H^lsFrench
fleet
leaves the
^^^^^ ^7 ^^"^ news, a part of the French left
Chebucto on the 13th,
by a most
violent storm, off
weakened and dispersed,
for
fleet,
Annapolis
Cape
:
consisting of
singly to France.
Never,' says an able and pious writer,
^*ie deiiv erance of the English
J
1747,
May.
The whole frontier in-
fested with
savn":es.
By
1st of
the
ham, appeared time when
to
May,
HE
[Vol.
liisTORV
the whole frontier
ii.
from Wells to Tops-
be infested by swarms of savages.
the fears and distresses of the people
It
were
was a
easily ag-
summer campaign had not therefore, we except Capt. Jordan's company of If, arrived. 30 men, who were posted at Topsham, the inhabitants westward were now left unassisted in their defence. Aware, probably, of this fact, the Indians shewed uncommon activity and alertness. Near Falmouth, they killed two women at New-Meadows, a gravated, because the recruits for the
;
man. Mr. Hinkley
;
Scarborough, they
at
man
tant; and at Wells, they chased a
As
men and
three
a
woman were
woman Attack on
Pemaquid.
A
men and
company of about 100, next made
in the territory of
menced
Sagad.ahock
their
and
in
which
soldiers
five
Pemaquid. of the gar-
belonging to Purpooduck, were killed, and
five recruits
three others,
appearance
and on the 26th of May, com-
;
a furious attack upon the fort and people of
This was a severe encounter,
oners
upon
firing
badly wounded the third, the
only escaping unhurt.*
large
rison,
crossing the Androscoggin in
Topsham, the Indians
a canoe, from Brunswick to
them, killed two of the
upon an inhabi-
fired
into the heart of the town.
who were
inhabitants of Falmouth,
were taken
pris-
Lovell and a lad only escaping, the former three being
;
About
dangerously wounded.
time,
this
they
made an
assault
On Damarihcotta.
upon a house
at
Damariscotta, took the owner a prisoner, and
They
slew his wife and daughter. Capt. Williamson tak-
en prisoner
also seized again
He
athan Williamson of Wiscasset.
Capt. Jon-
was an emigrant from the
west of England, and one of the earliest and most respectable settlers in his
went out
neighborhood. f
to search for their
It
them, permitted his companions, molested fering
;
taking
him any
wards him partiality.
Governor able to
him
into
They
told
when the party, waylaying who were before him, to pass un;
custody by main strength without of-
Suspicious of their
injury.
in particular,
at
seems, that he and two others
cattle
ill-will,
possibly to-
he wished to know the reason of their
him, they were on an errand from the
Quebec, who was desirous of seeing a prisoner,
give intelligence of the enemy's
movements or
plans.
* Smith's Journal, p. 47. t Sullivan^ p. 168.-
man
of eminence."
0'
^fVilliarr.son
was known
to the Ii^dians
as" a
— Chap,
253
of matne.
rx.]
Being exchanged the following year, he returned by way of BosHe said they treated him as well as their scanty means ton. would
afford
dividing to
;
him on the route
The
of subsistence they could procure.
work upon farms, river fishery,
for putting
was extremely
perilous
till
;
Canada, whatever
season for the spring pasturage, and for the
into
cattle
to
A. u. 1747.
by the
arrival
and ar-
^upon"^
J^^'^P'
rangement of re-enforcements, the destroying enemy was turned from our
arrived,
m
upon those of New-Hampshire.
frontiers,
Amidst these
direful
and discouraging scenes, news of a victory May 3. chill to the spirits of the French t'try^Ihtain-
which gave a surprizing
Canada, the Acadia ns, and
which
their Indian
all
of the eastern and northern Provinces.
;
—
a victory,
and vigor
appeared that France,
It
out two squadrons, in
all
38
sail
;
the one, a convoy of six
fleet
command
George, and the other, destined
M, de
St.
ada and Nova Scotia, was commanded by M. de
Forming
a junction, they sailed from Rochelle,
and several
after
a
frigates.
well fought
the
and were follow-
It
in
ships of the
May
3d, and
French struck
their
colors.*
fleets
Equally striking with the two former, was
Divine Providence
this
interposition of
favor of the northern English
was a most severe blow
to
Can-
met.
The two
battle,
for
Jonquiere.
la
ed by Admirals Anson and Warren, with 13 English line,
Ad-
of other ships, was put under the
East Indiamen and a of
eLXh
^n^a'^d^"' Worren.
character from disgrace and aspersion,
to retrieve her military fitted
allies
equal degree, revived the drooping courage
in
French
the
interests
in
colonies.
America.
Besides immense property taken, there were found on board the captured transports, 7,000
and numerxDus
M. de
la
suits
of clothes, 1,000 stands of arms,
designed for the Acadians and Indians.
articles
Jonquiere, Governor of Canada, an old
man
of 70, was
a prisoner, and the expectations of the Provincial French and
Ramsay and
the natives, were entirely blasted.
made
the best of their
in a large ship
way
to
from Massachusetts
to
exchanging or redeeming prisoners. they reported 361
in all
;
detachment
his
Canada
— 171
of
;f and agents were sent Prisoners Quebec, for the purpose of aJcanSa.
On their return, in August, whom took passage home;
* The French lost 6 ships of the line 6 East Indiamen 700 men killed and wounded and li million and half of money and bullion and had between 4 and 5,000 taken prisoners. " There were 30 ships laden with merchandize" and 9 taken. f 2 Hutch. Hist. p. 385. ;
;
;
;
—
254 A.
u
1747.
90 were scattered ed
;
;
—about 30
— and 70 had died
ii.
others were too sick to be remov-
having been taken from the
number
almost the whole
captivity;
in
[Vol.
HISTORY
'I'li'^'
frontiers of Massachusetts,
New-
Hampshire, and the eastern Provinces, Maine and Sagadahock. Overtures for peace were soon proposed by the powers
and
in
against
An
The
attack
Ebie^^
September,
the troops
all
at
war
;
expedition
for the
enlisted
Canada were discharged. our frontiers
hostile hordes, that visited
autumn,
the
in
appeared to be formed of Indians and a few associated French-
men, equally savage, and more mean
25 and 30
character, between
of New-Marblehead,
in
[Windham] probably
captive every one of the
succeeded
Bolton
young Mayberry, had the adroitness to in
which he seems
to
tidings
effect
;
Though
place.
—
his
companion,
an immediate escape
;
have been wounded by the shots he receiv-
By
ed, while they followed him.
by
with intent to take
some other
William
taking
in
party of this
and furnish themselves with
settlers,
plunder, while devising the ruin of
they
A
spirited.
number, entered the plantation
the report of guns
from him, the people had
as well as
notice to secure
sufficient
themselves.
An
The two
aitempi
Frederick,
remotest easterly garrisons were
they often attacked, they had «5eptembcr
looked upon
still
Frenchmen,
^
company of 60,
to
now determined
destroy.
Early
in
by
These, which
them, with the utmost jealousy and malevolence.
with the help of
September, a mixed
approached Fort Frederick, about break
silently
They
of day, their usual hour of attack.
intended probably to
take the garrison by surprize, or find an entrance by stealth, at
some unguarded moment
;
them, they happened
supposing
to fall in with
distance from the pickets
all
the soldiers within, did
own number.
not exceed one half their
;
But unexpectedly
a party of five,
to
a short
at
and finding their approach was there-
by discovered, they shot the five unfortunate
men
to
the ground,
three being instantly killed, and the other two wounded.
They
then furiously assailed the garrison, more than two hours, with a
But unable
determinate resolution to compel a surrender.
make
the least impression,
stone, they Another upon St. Georges'
it
withdrew completely repulsed.
This, or another
mixed party of
like character,
.
the fort at St. Georges, in a different manner. to
to
being principally constructed of
next besieged
J They attempted
open a subterraneous passage, from the bank of the
river,
by
Chap,
ix.]
of MAINE.
undermining the
When
its
eastern side, at a distance of ten rods. A. D.
1747.
they had advanced half way, the earth by reason of heavy
caved
rains,
on
fort
255
upon the diggers,
in
few rods
distant,
as tradition
relates,
and buried
Another attempt was then made a
or killed several of them.
—with which they proceeded about 20 The
abandoned the undertaking and the place.
feet,
and
cavities are
yet
be seen.*
to
The
A
itants.
had they
exchange
to
sels into their waters
Even
?
convert forest-
to
for necessaries
and before spring,
;
corn was worth 30s. by the bushel, and wheat flour
block-houses
remaining
As
the
;
were
and between
;
in
1
£10 by
Maine and Sagadahock,
more than twenty-five
garrisons;
public
five
there
Yet
depth of snow and the severity
of weather proved to be unusually great
Though
fields.
or to invite ves-
;
the wages of soldiers were paid in
The
a depreciating currency.
hundred.
Scarcity of
of provisions always enhances their price.
scarcity
trees into marketable lumber, than to cultivate their else
pro-
for the support of the inhab-
Beset by savages, the people were no more able
what
The
winter was a season of anxiety and distress.
duce of the country was insufScient
and noted
large
5 and 20 towns and plantations
yet only about 300 men were
the
four or
still
retained in the service.
Sagamores had intimated no wish
a cessation
for
Eastern miP
war, the government adopted a more permanent system for the
defence of the eastern inhabitants.
200
the war
£5,
was determined
It
to enlist
volunteers for the term of three years, or until the end ;
in the
and
pay each one besides
to
new
tenor
bills
ning of every succeeding
year
such as reside
These
were
in
;
excusing and excluding from
the frontier towns or plantations.
be formed into two companies for the
to
defence of the country, and the pursuit of the enemy. corps of 533
men was
of'''^^'"®"-
w^ages a bounty of
on his enlistment, and at the begin-
this service all
recruits
bis
to
be raised, of
whom 177
Another
being the most
expert disciplinarians and experienced soldiers, were assigned to the garrison
and the more exposed block-houses
;
and the res-
idue employed as scouting parties, guards, videttes, and informants.
any one were impressed
If
ed *
in
one year.f
MS.
into the service,
I^t. of Hez. Prince, Esq.
t Jonr. Mass.
H.
he was
But the ranks of both
of R.
May
9, 1748, p. 243.
to
classes
be exchang-
were rather
[VoL.
THE HISTORY
256 A. D. 1718.
avoided than sought by brave and ambitious men.
Objections
wQs
and irregular
pcrilous, fatiguing
The
service
few op-
affording soldiers
;
II,
to eiiislan(]
portunities to signalize themselves, or to acquire any considerable
the service
military credit.
It
was not a
an exploit, a chase, being
May
General Court,
27,
*
'
warrants draw more fines than that in
*
man
bills,
some
into
owing
—
men
;
though
a skirmish, a feat,
the Governor told
my
me,
impress-
out of the companies, and
instances two of the fines will scarcely hire
be necessary also
to
to
the
and the depreciation
to this
the service, especially upon
was found
;
several militia Colonels assure
of the
'
Hence
all.
that,
'
It
of victory or glory
field
often a field of battle and of blood
was
it
one
the eastern frontiers.'*
change the term of volunta-
ry enlistment, from three years to one only.
A
Proposition for estab lishing a fort at
Pe-
nobscot.
ress,
proposition
was made
for the
first
of erecting a fort-
time,
and establishing a garrison upon the banks of Penobscot
Governor Shirley thought,
river.
the seaboard
along
and might
;
it
would
also in
war, check the in-
in
them from
cursions of the Indians, and keep
fishing and- fowling
some measure secure our
fishermen, and coasters from annoyances.
In peace,
promotive of trade, and a preventive of trespasses.
command
truck house there might as
Cape Sable and
identified
;
made
would be
Indeed, a
the traffic of the tribes, as far
the river St. John
;
and a fur trade of such
extent must be worthy of great consideration. dians might be
it
Believing the In-
to see, that their real interests
and ours were
he added, that the best judges had given their un-
equivocal opinion in favor of the establishment. The
The enemy, now
ba.se-
euemy.
sidcrcd a
mere
partly
banditti.
Frenchmen, mostly Natives, were conThey were robbers, incendiaries and
murderers, alike disregarding If they
were chased
were ready
to
into
all
the
rules of
woods
honor and laws of war.
like beasts
of prey, they
follow the return of their pursuers, and
their depredations.
—
In
May
and June, they were seen
quent intervals, lurking around the habitations and
fields
renew at
fre-
of the
people dwelling between the Androscoggin and the Saco, and
waylaying the
whole intermediate
making prisoners of at
To
others.
road
;
shooting some,
mention particulars, they
Brunswick, Capt. Burnet and his neighbor
;
at
* Governor's Speech. t Joiir. Mass. Hoii.se of
Rep,
p.
66.— 16 Mass. Rec.
p. 340.
and
killed
North-Yar-
;;
Chap,
ix.]
mouth, houses
Mr. Eaton, took a captive, and burned several
shot
and
;
in
more
tors of
257
of Maine.
every place they
a, D. 1748
they were the perpetra-
visited,
These bloody scenes returning
or less mischief.
every year, and the present season, rendered more gloomy by the appearance of the fields and the gardens, parched and with-
ered by the early and extreme drought,
uncommon despondency
for they
;
°
as plain
the
2d of
July, '^ arrived
.
Falmouth the glad news,
at
On
close.
*'
But happily the period
indications of the Divine displeasure."
of darkness was drawing to a
the people with
filled
looked upon them,
that the nations
on preliminaries of peace ; and
we
after this,
war had agreed
at
hear of no more
J"'y
News
of
peace^;^ and
dian hostii-
ravages by the eastern* Indians in this war.
By and
October 7,
the ^rea^y, signed at Aix-la-Chapelle,
each crown surrendered all
conquests
territorial
Breton again passed
New-England,
to the other all prisoners without
the possession
into
;
and
Treaty of chapeiie.
To
of the French.
Massachusetts
to
The war
and her eastern inhabitants a grievance.
748,
Cape
and therefore, the Island
;
appeared ungracious
this
1
ransom,
originated
in
unhallowed motives, and closed without any considerable advan-
New-England by her
England or France.
tage, either to
zeal and public
loyalty,
acquired great credit and consideration
spirit,
which, however, to the extent due, the mother country was never In
willing to allow.
all
the colonial expeditions and public meas-
expended
ures, the Province of Massachusetts took the lead,
money
in
nearly half a million sterling, and lost about 3,000 of her
most able-bodied and Although troops
service, through the
eastern inhabitants
men.f number of 323, J were continued
effective
to the
;
winter,
for
the defence
means were used
in a. d. 1749.
and safety of the Guard
ascertain the wishes,
to
and dispositions of the Indians upon the subject of a treaty.
Hence
it
was, that early in the spring, several chiefs visiting the
fort at St.
Georges,
commanded by Capt. Bradbury,
Indians were tired of the war
;
and
if
they were
in
told
would agree with the Governor upon terms of peace. fore, a
passage thither was given them
* See post, A.
D.
f Preleminaries
1750, ravages
signed— April
There-
the Province
in
him the
Boston, they
Snow
committed by the northern Indians, 30,
1748.
—
1
Doug.
p.
565.
—
1
JSIinoVs
Hist. p. 80. \
fort
Namely, 45 at St. Georges George 12 at Saco 206 ;
Vol.
II.
;
;
24 at Pemaquid
in scouts.
33
—16
;
24 at Richmond
Jtfcw*.
Rec.
p. 428-9.
;
12 at
of
A.D.
The
1749.
executive and them visit
They
Council-chamber.
the
in
t»
,
to
j
,
professed -j
tvt
be a delegation from the tribes at Penobscot and JNorridge-
wock, and declared,
negoiiaie
II.
and on the 23d of June, a conference was holden between the
Safja-
mores
[VoL.
THE HISTORY
268
that
dians from the river St.
Sachems only waited settle a treaty
;
peace was greatly desired by
John*
for the
wishing
hostile
all
they,
'
the
all
the In-
and that the
appointment of a time and place to
meantime be suspended.
the
St. Francois,
to the
'
measures might
acts and
We
speak from our hearts,'
in
said
truth ; and we have brought own hearts these brothers presof peace makes the Indians everywhere They were dismissed, by being told, that
words of sincerity and
*
with us other credentials than our
*
ent
*
smile and rejoice. 'f
know, the voice
;
commissioners should meet the tribes
days of September
;
and that
in
at
Falmouth on the
the meantime, supplies
last
should
be transported to some of the eastern truck houses, and sold to
them quil
The French
at reasonable prices,
provided
all
of them continued tran-
and friendly.
The Govemor
of Canada,
it
was
sufficiently
his utmost to fix the Several tribes in
peace5
the interests of the French, and to render
upon him, and
entirely
known, was doing
Maine, and Nova Scotia,
Indians
them
still
in
dependent
But
obsequious to his influence. J
the
unfavorable turn their fortunes had taken, were quite sufficient to
shake the confidence of the Indians. eastern service
The number
was reduced, August 10,
to
70
;
of
men
garrisons ;§ and Sir William Pepperell, and
Commissioners ap-
in
the
—enough merely Thomas
Hutchinson, of the Council, and John Choate, Israel Williams,
and James Otis, of the House, were appointed Commissioners
to
treat with the tribes. October
14.
Chiefs a*
Falmouth,
Thcsc gentlemen, attended by a ^^^^^
waited
militia-men, till
arrived
at
military guard of
Oct. 14, before a single Indian appeared.
painful suspense
;
50 York-
Falmouth, Sept. 28, where they It
was a
but on that day, a very respectable delegation
of chiefs from Penobscot, Norridgewock, and St. Francois, presented themselves to the commissioners
;
immediately opened a
parley in the meeting-house; and on the 16th, the parties con-
cluded and signed a treaty.
The
celebrated treaty of Mr.
* Governor Shirley's Speech, 1749.
—
Rec. vol. 16. Jour, of House of Rep. p. 48. Gov. Matcarene's letter to Gov. Shirley, in May, 1749. House of Representatives, p. 14. 5 Jour
t Mass. X
Dum-
:
Chap, mer,
1726,) was
(in
259
of Maine.
ix.]
basis.
its
was denominated "the sub-A.D,
It
mission and agreement" of the tribes just mentioned.
on the part of the Indians should
lations were, that all hostilities
cease and not be renewed
that
;
all
mediately restored without ransom their possessions
all
unmolested
;
that the trade
be im-
their captives should
;
that the English should enjoy
and places of settlement
in the eastern
parts
between them and the Indians should
be under the direction of the Massachusetts government
;
that all
personal wrongs should be redressed by due course of law and justice, without
any act of personal revenge
the king's faithful subjects,
But
nances.
Sagamores reserved
the
;
and that they, as
would render obedience to
to his ordi-
the Indians,
lands
all
and proprieties not conveyed by them, nor possessed by the English in
;
and
the privileges of fishing, hunting,
all
and fowling, as
times past.
New-Hampshire, was included had signed
it,
in
the Province of Massachusetts,
when
and
;
the
Commissioners
presents, the parties
separated with saluta-
mutual and cordial friendship.*
tions of
The
as
treaty
and gave the Chiefs a counterpart, and presented
them with the usual
*
as well
the
treaty premised, that these Indians, and others, " inhabiting- within
hjs Majesty's territories of
New-England," had carried on war against
Massachusetts and New-Hampshire, contrary to treaties.
—This truly do6s
not expressly include the Mickmaks, nor the Jilarechites^ at St. John's river; yet
it is
thought the Indians at Passamaquoddy were mixed with
—The treaty
itself is signed by nineteen Sagamores and remarkable that those of Penobscot, of Norridg-eFrancois, [by their original names, " Anasag-unticooks,
those of Penobscot,
chief captains; and
it is
wock, and of St. and Wawenocks"] signed
in separate
'^Anasagunticooks and
JSTorridgewocks,''^ [or^
" Wawenocks,''^ [or
St.
Canibas
columns, thus '-^
PenobscotSy** [or,
Tar-
ratines.]
tribe.']
Toxus Cneas
(seal)
Eger-en mut
(seal)
(seal)
Maganumba
(seal)
(seal)
Natambouit
(seal)
(seal)
Magawonbee Harry
(seal)
Esparagoosaret
(seal)
Sauquisb
(seal)
Soosephnia
(seal)
Nesnouon
(seal)
Warcedeen
(seal)
(seal)
Wawawnunka
(seal)
Noktoonos Nesagumbuit Peereer
Francois Indians.]
Sawwaramet
(seal)
Ausado
(seal)
Waaununga
(seal) (seal)
See treaty entire, Mass. Council Records, vol. JL
^Alsoj 9 ColL Mass. Hist, Soc.
p.
220-222.
1749.
Its stipu- Treaty,
D. 1734-1767,
p.
108-11.
[Vol.
THE HISTORY
260
CHAPTER
li.
X.
Paris, embassy provinces— Governor The two boundaries between Canada and Nova Scotia—All paper as — money redeemed— Coins regulated— Laws — Anonymous — Truck houses — Trade—Jonquiere sends Recovery of Nova Scotia— Minas troops isthmus —Halifax tached by Indians —Jonquiere — Governor Cornwallis French from Chignecto — They fortify isthmus under Come — The Fort of Corn— Peace with Indians — Affray Wiscasset— Shirley's
eastern
to
to the
letters
captives
-
to the ncrth-easterly
at-
oj
refuses to release captives
drives the
settled
at the
wallis
la
unsettled
the
at
Northern Indians attack fort Richmond Dresden, Swan Island, and Georgetown Defensive measures
Meadows A. D. 1749.
Maine and
All
— Treaty with wcre
inter-
mischief at
—Prisoners carried — off
Falmouth and New-
outrages at
the Natives confirmed.
the occurrences in relation to these eastern
sincc they
first settled,
Provinces,
had not given them so much import-
of foreigners, as the events in the late war.
hofkviewed
wih
—Indian
— Commit
Something had been previously mate,
soil
and natural resources
;
knovi^n of their
now
geography,
cli-
they were thought worthy
of public consideration, by the politicians both of England and Lines be-
The
France.
divisional
line
between Canada and Nova Scotia
LdTan?^" had not been settled by negotiation ; and therefore Governor »SAiVZey and the Marquis VGalisioniere, late Governor of Newk°dispute!''^
France, were appointed, soon after the goes lo Paris,
barked
late
treaty, to
open a commission upon the subject.
^^^^isj
at
Boston, Sept. 11, 1749, and
left
meet
Shirley
at
em-
the chair to Spencer
Phips, the Lieutenant-Governor.* Specie ar-
The same month
England™
'^i^- Sterling, remitted
arrived at Boston the
sum
of £183,649, 2s,
from England to reimburse the Province of
Massachusetts, her expenses in the Louisbourg expedition. It had been ascertained by the General Court since the war, that
about £2,200,000 *
Here
of credit were outstanding in circula-
closes the History of Massachusetts by Jlr. Hutchinson.
said he finished
closes in
in biUs
May
it
in
1749.
1766.
He
He
died,
died in 1752.
June
3,
1780.
Douglass^
It is
Summary
— ChjLP. X.]
f
OF MAINE.
261
tioD, which had at length so depreciated, that one ounce of silver A. D.
505. of the old tenor,
would purchase tenor
Us.
and
in,
which they allowed to be paid
of 45s. old tenor, or
now
mill'd dollar,
be paid
in coin
ounce
and
;
or specie,
They
money,
in
—and
tempted
the country,
creditors,
None
short,
—
silver
mer-
and gold could not
anxious to obtain the specie, would be
many
But
of the
was opened,
the treasury
bills
15 months, that they were
of
especially
there must be a great scarcity of
oppress their debtors.
to
April 2, 1750, and so
course
—
by the
of another colony,
clamorous against the measure.
was too
said the time set
be retained
Spanish sterling.
6c?.
8c?. in silver
bill
Many,
should be liable to a penal prosecution. chants and speculators, were
4s.
March 31, 1750, should
after
whoever paid or received a
that
£75,000
at the rate
for every
tenor,
the rate of 6s.
at
bills,
was enacted by the Legislature,
it
made
pecuniary contracts,
all
these
money, or
called 6s. lawful
Fully to effectuate the purpose, that
new
^d.
lis.
in
were redeemed afterwards
of the evils foretold were experienced
;
in the
uncurrent.
the principles of
moral honesty and public confidence were extensively promoted
;
and renovated vigor and cheerfulness were diffused, through the
community,
On
the introduction and use of a metallic currency, statutes
*
See ante, A. D. 1742.
f
By
this
Fed. mo.
n.
pecuniary transactions.
in all their
mode of redemption, Oz.
Sil.
TroyW.
C.
Slat,
£.
s.
d.
£.
s.
;
J^ew Tenor.
£.
s.
Old Tenor,
£.
d.
s.
d.
05
0
0
0 15
1
17
6
7 10 00
0
0
2
5
5
12
6
22 10 00
56
5
0
225 00 00
562 10
0
2,250 00 00
0 56,250 00 00
225,000 00 00
1
3,33^
3
1
9
3
30 0
0
l,gO,00
90
1,000,00
900
300
0
100,000,00
9i',000
30,000
0
Money
Ster.
068
1,11^
10)0
the ratio stands thus
or law. mo.
remitted £183,649,
0
22 10
225
0 22,500
0
2s. 7ic/.-|-tax
0 12
2 10 00
6
£75,000=£258,649,
2*.
l^d,
which would redeem about £2,586^500 of the old tenor, or £646,625, of tho new tenor. In Nov. 1752, Lieutenant-Governor Phips says, if the outstanding taxes were paid, the Province would be out of debt— a happi-
—
'
'
^ S. p. 150-9-160.
Chap,
x.]
year past, which, though
ment,
was
filled
was
it
of no very great
in itself
tribe,
A. D. 1760.
between several white men and some of the
which one Indian was
in
badly wounded.
mo-
This The
the eastern inhabitants with fear and trembling.
a violent quarrel
Canibas
267
of maine.
So unfortunate was the
as to occur within six
weeks
and before peace had become
killed
homi-
casset.
and two others of time,
affray, in point
treaty of Falmouth,
after the late
Three of the white
fairly settled.
men, Obadiah Albee, Richard and Benjamin Holbrook, were taken into custody by Samuel Harnden, upon a charge of murder
and being removed to Falmouth, were confined
Gowen
The whole
Wilson.
transaction
was a topic
;
house of
in the
every
in
one's mouth, though there was a strong current setting against
every thing Indian; and their escape. it
Some
would retake
notice of the
a
it,
effected
a riotous rescue, others imputed
offered a reward of
either of the fugitives,
The
abettor.
weeks the prisoners
a few it
and collusion of the keepers.
to the negligence
ant-Governor, hearing of
any
in
called
and
£25
General Court, when next
The Lieuten£50 to such as
for the detection in session, also
of
took
and ordered Jabez Fox, Esq. of Falmouth,
affair,
justice of the peace, to
examine
in
a legal form, into the con-
duct of Harnden and Wilson, and deal with them according to In the meantime the culprits, January
law and the testimony.
11, (1750) surrendered themselves in
;
and being removed
York, were indicted and arraigned for murder,
of the Superior Court, holden by resolve, the ruary.*
But there was no
when Albee was satisfied
two
tried
with the verdict
into the
trial
till
and acquitted. ;
all
Feb-
in
the regular term in June
;
quite dis-
and the Legislature ordered the other
county of Middlesex, to take their
of the others,
term
week
last
The Court were
Albee was then convicted of a felonious trials
to the gaol
at a special
trial
assault.;
August.
in
and
the relations of the deceased, the
at
the
wounded
Indians and the chiefs of the tribe, were invited to be present and witness the fairness of the proceedings.
proceeded as
far as
Lieutenant-Governor Phips, treatment, as well as *
The next
Accordingly,
1
3 of them
Boston, where they had an interview with
and
received the most courteous
some valuable presents:
year, the Riot acl
was revised
;
—and though
they
and the Superior Court au-
thorized to hold special sessions, in any county, on great emergencies,
wherein there was appointed by law only one t«rm
to
be boldon in a year.
Trial, acdi'Jilia;^^"'*
[VoL.
THE HISTORY
268 A. D. 1750.
found there could be no
of the offenders, at that time, they
trial
The
returned home, apparently satisfied.
quently remanded to Yorkshire, while the dians were assuming
it is,
that
even
in
prisoners were subse-
with the In-
difficulties
gloomy aspect
again a very
find, that either of the
II.
;
and
I
Holbrooks were ever convicted.
whenever a white person was
do not Certain
tried for killing an Indian,
times of profound peace, he was invariably acquitted
;
being impossible to impannel a jury, on which there were not
it
some, who had suffered by the Indians, either
in
persons,
their
families, or estates.
Rumor
Touched on
of
this occasion,
with natural or affected sympathy
and enkindled by French emissaries into a
brothers,
the ludiaiis
for their
Franroisio
flame of resentment towards the English, the Indians at St. Fran-
K^'chrnoHT cois
aggravate the above
men-
wrong, and magnify some supposed provocations,
into
and Becancourt,* took occasion
tioned
company of arrival,
Hence, a
causes for acts of retaliation and revenge.
sufficient
to visit
to
80, receiving supplies from Trois Revieres, proceeded
Norridgewock and Penobscot. it
was reported,
About the time of
their
northern fighters were to be
that these
joined by 150 Tarratines; that a French ship of 64 guns, three
20
or four brigs and ions and
towards
St.
an attack
48 hours.
in
were only 14;
George 4
;
and
of them being so
little
probably
illy
Saco
river
of troops, provistheir
course
and that the garrison
;
by an Indian
told
—Since
—they
might expect
the peace, the soldiers at that fort
Pemaquid 6;
at at
full
had been seen shaping
Georges or Sagadahock
Richmond had been
at
T'onThT'^
transports,
warlike stores,
at
8, including
George's 15;
St.
at
two or three armorers
fort ;
expected.
But though
these rumors,
so alarming to the
unfounded and incorrect;
eastern people,
gfrm'^n ^of
were
mond.
Indians from the north, associating with themselves probably
in part
young Canibas
fighters,f did, Sept. 11,
it is
fall
true, that
a
body of
some
with great fury upon
Richmond-fort, which, notwithstanding the timely notice given
by the Indian, might have been weakness, and *
About
this
made
easily taken,
the best use of their
had they known
advantage.
it
its
But they
time a ietter was received at Boston, from Asseramo, chief
Waweaocks, (spelt Worenock," in the record,) making- complaints, There were about luO in all.—JiS. Letter.
of the f
all
prepared to encounter, or withstand an assault
f
Chap,
;
of maine.
x.]
some
spent the day in spoiling
habitations in the vicinity,
domestic animals, probably for food
killing
and
A. D. i760.
nine great cattle
;
being butchered by them, and two others barely escaped slaughter
by running within the reach of the guns juncture as
ical
it
truly was, Capt.
the
at
In this crit-
fort.
Samuel Goodwin and a small
party of his men, had the good fortune under the covert of dark-
ness to reach the garrison
by a
When
in safety.
informed of
abandoned the place
prisoner, the assailants
themselves into parties, committed acts of mischief places, on both sides of the
A
who
small part of those
ment
dead, just as he was entering
the
Aroused by what had taken place, Davis,
another apartment of the same house, sprang up to
in
its
when
it
the Indian thrust in
Davis seized
shutting.
women
of some
and kept
fell
Dresden,
Mr.
him
close the door, to prevent
next day about sunrise, as a
returning from milking his cows, an Indian shot
door of his house. dwelt
about the
crossed the river lurked
The
of the inhabitants.
from an ambush, and he
who
different
in
river.
[now Dresden], watching every move-
plantation of Frankfort,
Pomeroy was
Kennebeck
this fact Other mis-
and forming
;
the
of his gun
barrel
and with the assistance
it,
room, wrested the gun from the savage,
in the
as a trophy of his success.
As
way of ad-
the only
equately avenging himself, the savage caught a young child of Davis', in the outer kitchen or near
McFarland, left
it,
and carried
Another Indian, concealing himself
tive.
as he
went
to
In the
men
;
and these they
same unanticipated
visit,
the place, they carried
away with them
perhaps
Swan
burning the people's houses and killing their cattle left
at
Before they
the same day, another party of them was ravaging
they
fired
field,
work, and wounded him.
the settlement, they seized two other
carried to Canada.*
away cap-
it
the
in
;
^,g^ ^p^^
Island, ^^j^"
and when
thirteen or four-
teen of the inhabitants prisoners.
But
the
main body proceeded down the
divided into scouts.
One
river,
and then
of them undertook the destruction of
Wiscasset and the settlements of Sheepscot, set several houses
on
fire,
boring
took two prisoners, and would have laid waste the neighcountry,
block-house.
had they met with success
Another scout proceeded
aiming their vengeance
MS.
at the garrison
Let. from Dresden.
in
against
surprizing
on Parker's Island, t
See
the
Georgetown in
the
vol. I, p. 50-1.
visit ''^'^
*
Par-
[VoL.
THE HISTORY
270
Having come
A. D. 1750. heart of the village. Sept. 25.
of the
call
to
a house, Sept. 25, within
they were probably discovered,
fort,
their depredations
by
assailing
II.
they began
for
with their hatchets while the
it
owner bravely fought them, without asking quarter, till they had He, then leapliterally cut their way into it through the doors. ing out of a back ly
window, sought safety by
was he pursued by two savages,
But
flight.
saw no
that he
so close-
possibility of
escape otherwise, than by betaking himself to the water,
swimming
to the
springing into a canoe
were able
him
gain upon
to
and
His pursuers as nimbly
Arrowsick.
Island
;
and when
almost within reach of their paddles, he suddenly turned upon
them, and with great presence of mind, overset their
and plunged them both level
—
into the water,
same element.
equals in the
life,
his
But though he
to the shore.
bark
lig^ht
three were on a
all
During the struggle of the
own
Indians for the preservation of their
umphantly
when
he escaped
lives,
tri-
providentially saved
his
house and barn with most of their contents were reduced
to ashes.*
Boldly resisted or
Carry
pSnerai
carrying
on
foiled in all their
their route,
man
one
[Windham] and one shewed themselves mischief
assaults,
away with them, between 20 and 30 at
Maquoit, one
Gorhamtown.
at
in the
they withdrew
prisoners, and taking
at
On
New-Marblehead, their return,
they
of Falmouth, and did some
outskirts
Particularly in passing through
in several other places.
New-Gloucester, they met Joseph Taylor and Mr. Farewell near
Seabody-pond
;
whom
they seized, and proceeded with them
through the woods, towards the sources of the Little Androscog-
^
gin, in
the northerly part of the present Paris.
Discovering a
^
ofSnowand
new
track, they pursued
found the camp of two hunters.
moment
height of land, where
to the
it
Snow and
Butterfield.
of discovery, the Indian file-leader, hooded with a large
hawk-skin, retaining
its
feathers,
and hanging down upon
shoulders, raised a hideous yell, and quickened his pace.
having been a captive
in a
former war, and conceiving
antipathy to the Indians and their
mined
to sacrifice his
When
he heard the shout, he was
the
flint
they
At the
manner of
rather than be
life,
in
living,
again
his
Snow, a great
had deter-
their
prisoner.
a sitting posture, pecking
of his gun, which was at the time loaded with only a • I
Minot,
p.
141.
;
Chap, x.]
of Maine. Deliberately
partridge-charge.
271 on
rising
good aim, he brought the foremost Indian few
He
feet distant.
was
Chief.
their
his
and taking
feet,
a..
D.
nsa
ground, only a
to the
This so infuriated
his
companions, that they instantly fired upon him a volley, which
To
pierced his body through with several bullets. rage, they then cut and
mangled
till
it
tired
;
ground, and forbidding Butterfield, and the other
bury or
The body
touch.it.
bog, where
Moose-pond empties
Little
into
above
it
prisoners,
Chief they carried
of their
their
satiate
leaving
to
into
Androscoggin
;
after
breaking the turf and forming an aperture, they crushed
deep
into the mire,
and departed
when
with another party of Indian plunderers,
them joined
in
fell
all
in
of
something like funeral solemnities, commemorative
of their Sagamore's death
;
—then
wiping the tearful eye, re-
hearsed to each other their adventures and
good cheer,
it
of inter-
At Umbagog Lake, they
mingled grief and respect.
company
;
uttering expressions
a
and
as
was with them
if
feats,
with the same
nothing melancholy had happened.
French and Indian languages, and was afterwards an of Indian youth
at
Taylor
became acquainted with both the
five [years,
instructer
Dartmouth College.*
This sudden and unexpected incursion of the Indians, again filled
the eastern country with fearful distress, and the government
For
with great anxiety.
peace could not be enjoyed when
if
there were subsistina; ° treaties between the
crowns,
—and between New-England
^
Endish and French °
colonists
and the natives
then surely no respite from perpetual warfare, could be expected.
As
the best
way
encounter such an emergency, the Lieutenant-
to
Governor ordered 150 men
to
be detached or drafted, from the
now commanded by
eastern Regiment,
Col. Charles Cushing
of Falmouth, and sent to scour the woods on the frontiers be-
tween Saco and
St.
Georges
;
—
also supplies of
ammunition were
put into the hands of Capt. Williamson of Wiscasset, and Capt.
Nichols of Sheepscot, for the fensive measures rest here
;
common good.f
for the
Nor
did the de-
General Court being specially
convened, Sept. 26, voted pay and supplies to the soldiers raised, until the 1st
*
H. t
of November,
the succeeding year,
—
MS.
unless sooner
Let. J. S. Holmes, Esq. 1721. Mr. Taylor lived in Claremont, N. His oldest daughter was the wife of Col. E. Rawson of Paris, Maine,
Jour. H. of Rep.
p. 66,
A. D. 1750.
^^1,^
eastern
a^a"J[^iie 14'.
—
'
;
—
of Fort Western. t
MS,
Lei.
from Dresden,
1821.
— One block-house was then standing.
302
Troops
[VoL.
THE HISTORY
A. D. 1754. whale-boats,
and videttes, for the communication of expresses,
and Falmouth,
^^^'^ Halifax dis-
charged,
except those retained
17
fore Oct. Monies vet^ies""*
II.
The
hours.
were
troops,
discharged, be-
all
Commander-in-Chief and the
receiving from the
;
24
in
in the garrisons,
Imme-
General Court, expressions of particular approbation.* diately the General
Court voted £600,
the campaign, and
£300
be
laid out in
the charges of
presents
which were
upon the Kennebeck and Penobscot
to be sent to the tribes
appropriated a
to
to defray
sum necessary
also
;
procure provisions, shoes or
to
moccasins, and other supplies, for the garrison at Fort Halifax,
and £470 in
falls
for building
the
a small
[Lebanon] Phillipstown,
second or ten-mile
repairing
for
Brunswick and the block-houses or woh,
at the
fort
Androscoggin, and
Fort George at at TowNumber 7,
fortified habitations
Saco, Narraganset
Gorhamtown, Sebago, New-Marblehead, Saccarappe, and Topsham. An
attack
uponlbe soidiery of
Qn
the 6th of
fax to the
Fort Hallfax.
...
November, an express
Govemor, informine him .
arrived from Fort Hali-
had
that the Indians
.
fallen
.
upon
.
a party of the garrison, while they were engaged in hauling logs for the use of the fort, killed
away
ried
and scalped one soldier and car-
This outrage, committed so
four others, prisoners.
soon after solemn confirmation of former
treaties,
was
universally
viewed, not only as a piece of base and cruel treachery, but a certain precursor of another Indian war.
It
entirely
changed
the aspect of our eastern affairs, throwing a dark cloud over the
whole.
About the same
time, an English captive,
who had
pur-
chased his freedom, brought news from Canada, that 500 French
and Indians were collecting
at
Quebec, and preparing
to
make
a furious assault upon Fort Halifax. Presents witbholden
from the Tribes.
Halifax re* enforced.
Hcnce, the Governor was induced presents designed for the tribes at
then on board ot the Province Sloop
a re-enforcement of tars
;
1
00 men, with
and issued orders
Maine, notice. state of
to
be
in
to the six
to
withhold the valuable
Kennebeck and Penobscot, ;
but sent to Fort Halifax
five additional
cohorn-mor-
companies of minute
men
in
constant readiness for marching, at the shortest
Halifax and the frontiers were put in the best possible
defence for the winter
vessels might be taken
;
and as there was
fear,
that our
by the French, who were supposed
13 Council Records, p. 297-8.
t 18
Couucil Records,
to
be
p. 329.
Chap,
xi.]
303
of Maine.
ranging the eastern coasts, an embargo of 26 days, was laid upon all
A. D. 1754.
such as had on board, either provisions or other supplies. An
Extremely anxious
still
Canada
in
a release and return of captives,
effect
to
/»
numbers of whom,
was represented by
it
•
rti
r
1
J
•
friends,
afiiicted
^" agency
were
Massachusetts and New-Hampshire sent Capt.
;
Phinehas Stevens thither on that errand
hoping, no doubt, to
;
was productive of more
nadians.
But
good
by paying or even offering extravagant ransom, we
for
;
mission
actually encouraged and tempted the Indians to the
Canada
the''
°
release
"P"^®'*
than
savage ex-
were redeemed, the price
If they
of taking captives.*
ploits
evil
to
Ca-
learn likewise, something of the measures or designs of the
the
embar-
paid gave the foe fresh strength and means to carry on this diabolical kidnapping
The
mode
of warfare.
indignation of the public
against the Indians of St.
was now more especially aroused
Francois
as
;
were the
principal instigators to a rupture.
time had
in fact arrived,
be
any one of
their scalps, ;
Many
none other, ought
that tribe, if
and directed
The whole
^'^jf^^"
to for Farther
In-
JJ^
jg"^*'^^^
agent in England to pur-
their
chase for the Province 250 stands of arms, and
powder.
fnj,^ns"?n-*
believed the
The General Court offered £100, and £10 more, for any one of their
utterly exterminated.
dians taken alive
when
was manifest, they
it
1
500
barrels of
winter was passed in restless anxiety
being fearfully apprehended, that none of
all
;
it
the eastern Indians,
except, possibly, the Tarratines, could be deterred from rushing
To
into hostilities.
ment made them
satisfy
friendship and kindness rest quietly
them and keep them
presents, gave ;
and
them the
finally
tranquil, govern-
strongest assurances of
promised them,
if
they would
under the verdant trees of peace, that a truck house
should be established upon the Penobscot, and be well supplied with
of
all
the articles they needed, at fair prices.
uncommon
interest
empty ; and " the were
and solicitude
distressing
;
It
was a period
the public treasury was
circumstances of the Province"
laid before his Majesty, with earnest solicitations for assist-
ance. *
Hence, " the
tender of them
savag-es
when
were more desirous of taking captives and more 2 Belk. J^. H. p. 222.
—
taken, than in former wars."
Public
[Vol.
THE HISTORY
304
CHAPTER
11.
XII.
—
—
The French war and 6th war with the Indians Fortifications Four expeditions against the French They are driven from Nova The French Neutrals removed Scotia hy Winslow and MonJcton
—
— — Depredations Indians — War declared against them Penobscot—Bounties — Defence of — frontiers PenobAffair of Cargill— War against —An earthquake—Four against French— Public embarrassments —A loan of