The Dutch and Quaker colonies in America 2

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adam_text CONTENTS. CHAPTER X. THE ENGLISH AUTOCHATS. Peaceful transfer of New Netherland to English rule . . 1 Admirable character of Governor Nicolls . . . . 2,3 Carr s shameful conduct at New Amatel . . . . 3, 4 Fall of the republic of New Haven ..... б The Connecticut boundary ....... 5, 6 Yorkshire, Dukes County, and Cornwall .... 6 Cartwright sails for England, but lands in Spain . . . 7 Pleasant Saturday evenings in Boston . . . 8, 9 Maverick moves to New York ......9 Settlements west of the Hudson Eiver .... 10 The grant to Berkeley and Carteret .... 10, 11 Founding of Elizabethtown ......12 The name New Jersey (Nova Cœsarea) . . . .12 Unwillingness of New Haven leaders to be annexed to Con¬ necticut ..........13 Exodus from New Haven to New Jersey . . . .14 Robert Treat and Abraham Pierson .....14 Constitutional troubles in New Jersey . . . . .15 Lord Berkeley sells out his interest to a party of Quakers 16 Nicolls returns to England, and is succeeded by Francis Lovelace ..........17 Abolition of the distinction between great and small burgh¬ ers ...........18 The first mail on the American continent, monthly between New York and Boston, starts on New Year s Day, 1673 19, 20 The postman s route ........21 The English towns on Long Island protest against arbitrary taxation .........22,23 Charles II. abandons the Triple Alliance, and joins with Louis XIV. in attacking Holland .....24 iv CONTENTS. Admiral Evertsen s fleet in the West Indies . . . .24 Evertsen captures the city of New York, and names it New Orange ..........25 Anthony Colve is appointed governor of New Netherland . 25 The English towns on Long Island are refractory . . 26 Danger of an attack by the New England Confederacy . 27 How Governor Colve pulled down houses to improve his fort ..........27-31 Lovelace s purchases and debts ..... 81, 32 Schemes of Louis XIV........33 Ingenious double-dealing of Charles II. ... 34, 35 The treaty of Westminster restores New York to the Eng¬ lish ...........35 Conflicting grants and claims ......36 The duke sends Edmund Anđros to govern New York . 37 Character of Andros ........37 His early life .........38 Anthony Brockholls and William Dyer . . . .38 Arrival of Andros in New York ..... 39 The English towns on Long Island declare that they belong to Connecticut, but in vain ......39 The oath of allegiance ; protest of leading· burghers . 40, 41 Andros showed a want of tact in this affair . . . .42 Demand for a representative assembly ; the duke s letters 42, 43 Andros s zeal for municipal improvements ... 44 He tries in vain to reform the currency .....45 And fulminates against excessive tippling .... 45 He lays claim to Connecticut for the duke . . . .46 King Philip s War breaks out ......47 Connecticut prepares to resist Andros, and Captain Bull baffles him at Saybrook ......48, 49 Invasions of the Mohawk country by the French . . 50, 51 Jesuit intrigues with the Long House .....52 Mistaken policy of the Duke of York .... 53 Journey of Andros into the wilderness . . . . .54 Arendt van Corlear and his melancholy fate ... 54 Corlear s village, Schenectady ...... 54 Andros arrives in the Oneida country and holds a grand pow¬ wow with the Indians .......55, 56 He organizes a Board of Indian Commissioners . . .56 Robert Livingston ........57 Andros s relations with New England . . . . .58 King Philip in the Berkshire mountains . . .59 CONTENTS. V War with the Tarratines .......60 Andros visits England, is knighted, and returns to New York 61 CHAPTER XL NEW YORK IN THE YEAB 1680. The great comet, and how it was regarded in New York . 62 Approach to New York from the harbour ; Fort James . 63 Pearl Street and Broad Street ......64 The Water Gate and Maiden Lane .....65 Shoemaker s Land ; the Land Gate . . . . .66 Bowery Lane and the Common ...... 67 The Collect, or Fresh Water ; Wolfert s Marsh . . 68 The Kissing Bridge ; the Bowery Village ... 69 Kip s Bay and Turtle Bay .......70 Harlem ..........71 The Great Kill, and Lispenard s Meadows . . . .71 Origin of Canal Street .......72 Sappokanican, or Greenwich ; Minetta Brook . . .73 Visit of the Labadist missionaries, Dankers and Sluyter . 74 Their experience at the custom-house .... .75 They cross the East River and pass through Brooklyn . 76, 77 They are entertained at Gowanus hy Simon de Hart . . 78 They proceed to Najack (Fort Hamilton) .... 79 Their description of an Algonquin household . . 80-82 They pass a hilarious night at Harlem, where they meet James Carteret ........83 They are charged a high fare for crossing Spuyten Duyvil . 84 They compliment the good beer of Greenwich ... 85 But are not pleased with the New York dominies . . 86 Rev. James Wolley praises the elimate of Manhattan . 37 His Latin supper with the Calvinist and Lutheran parsons . 88 Charges of heresy brought against Dominie Van Rensselaer 89 Estates and revenues of New York ..... 90 Formation of an independent Classis . . . . .91 The flour monopoly ........91, 92 Affairs in New Jersey .......92, 93 Andros asserts sovereignty over East Jersey ... 93 Carteret resists, and Andros deposes him . . . .94 Shameful arrest of Carteret ...... 95 His trial, acquittal, and return to Elizabethtown . . .96 The duke relinquishes East Jersey to the Carterets . . 97 vi CONTENTS. And West Jersey to Byllinge and his friends . . .98 Which brings William Penn upon the scene ... 98 CHAPTER XII. pekn s holy experiment. Religious liberty in Pennsylvania and Delaware . . .99 Causes of intolerance in primitiye society ; identity of civil and religious life ........100 Military need for conformity .....100, 101 Illustration from the relations of the Antinomians to the Pequot War ........101, 102 The notion of corporate responsibility .....102 Political and religious persecutions ..... 103 Reasons for the prolonged vitality of the persecuting spirit 104, 105 Evils of persecution ; importance of preserving variations . 105 From a religious point of view the innovator should be greeted with welcome ....... 106 Sir Henry Vane s heavenly speech . . . . . 107 Cromwell s tolerance ........ 108 Quietists and Quakers ........108 Career of George Fox ......109, 110 Origin of the epithet, Quaker ......110 James Naylor and other crazy enthusiasts . . . Ill Missionary zeal of the early Quakers ..... 112 Their great service in breaking down the Massachusetts the¬ ocracy ..........113 Charles II. and the oath of allegiance .....113 Early years of William Penn ...... 114 His conversion to Quakerism . . . . . .115 It makes trouble for him at home . . . . .116 Penn s services to Quakerism . . . . . . 117 His steadfastness and courage ...... 118 Some of his writings : Innocency with her Open Face . 118 If you will not talk with me, says Penn, I must write . 119 You call names at me instead of using argument . . . 120 If you do not blame Luther for asserting the right of private judgment, why blame me ?......120 When you persecute others, you assume your own infalli¬ bility, as much as the Papists do ..... 121 But you cannot hurt us, for if God is with us, who can be against us ?.........121 CONTENTS. vii No Cross no Crown ........122 Religion thrives not upon outward show .... 122 It is but a false cross that comports with self-indulgence . 123 Religion is not a fetish, but a discipline .... 123 Better resist temptation than flee from it ... . 124 The wholesomeness of solitude ......125 The follies of fashion ........126 Thee and thou ........127 The use of you in place of thou, says Penn, is undemo¬ cratic ...........128 Memorable scene in the Lord Mayor s court ; futile attempt to browbeat a jury .......129, 130 The recorder declares that England will never prosper until it has a Spanish Inquisition ......130 Penn s marriage, and charming home in Sussex . . 131 He goes on a missionary tour in Holland and Germany 131, 132 Elizabeth, the Princess Palatine ......132 Anna Maria, Countess of Homes .....132 Penn preaches to the servants in the palace .... 133 At the inn he meets a young merchant of Bremen . . 133 Penn tells the ladies of his conversion ..... 134 At which a Frenchwoman of quality is deeply moved . 134 A meeting on Sunday at the palace ; emotion of the princess 135 Penn takes leave, and goes to preach in Frankfort and neigh¬ bouring towns .........136 At Duyshurg he gets a gruff greeting from Count von Falk¬ enstein ..........137 At Leeuwarden he has a talk with an ancient maid, Anna Maria Schurmann........138 He rebukes some fellow-travellers .....138 Historic significance of the journey .....139 How Penn became interested in West Jersey . . . 140 The founding of Salem on the Delaware .... 140 Beginnings of a Quaker colony in West Jersey . . 141 Peremptory demeanour of Andros .... 141, 142 Founding of Burlington .......142 Thomas Hooton s letter to his wife ..... 143 Penn s idea of a democratie constitution .... 144 High tariffs and spoils of office have introduced new phases of tyranny unforeseen by Penn .... 144 Andros claims West Jersey for the Duke of York . . 145 Penn s ingenious though defective argument . . 145, 146 Final release of the Jerseys ...... 146 vin CONTENTS. Penn s claim against the crown ...... 147 How he conceived the holy experiment ... 148 Boundaries of Penn s province ; seeds of contention . 148-150 Name of the new commonwealth .....150 The charter of Pennsylvania compared with that of Mary¬ land . .........151 Significance of the contrast ......152 Influence of the king s experience with Massachusetts . 152, 153 Penn s humane and reasonable policy .... 153 His letter to the colonists .......154 A Quaker exodus ........155 Penn comes to the New World ......156 How Chester got its name ....... 156 The founding of Philadelphia ......157 Penn s opinion of the country ..... 157, 158 The Shackamaxon treaty ; Penn s skill in dealing with In¬ dians ..........158, 159 Some incorrect impressions regarding the purchase of Indian lands ...........160 Not only in Pennsylvania and New Netherland, but in all the New England colonies, in Virginia, in Maryland, and in New Sweden, the colonists paid the Indians for their lands ..........160-162 The price paid to four Delaware chiefs for the tract between the Delaware and the Susquehanna . . . 162, 163 Increase Mather s confusion of title . . . . 164 Unstinted credit is due to the Quakers for their methods of dealing with the red men ; nevertheless in the long peace enjoyed by Pennsylvania the controlling factor was not Quaker justice so much as Indian politics . . 164-166 Penn s return to England .......167 CHAPTER XIII. DOWNFALL OF THE STUAKTS. Andros returns to England, and in his absence the duke s customs duties expire ........168 And the collector, William Dyer, for insisting upon the pay¬ ment of duties, is indicted for treason .... 169 The demand for a representative assembly is renewed . 170 The duke grants the assembly, and sends out Thomas Don- gan as governor .......170, 171 CONTENTS. ix Meeting of the first assembly in Fort James . . , 111 Death of Charles II. ; the duke becomes king . . .172 Dongán and the Marquis Denonville play a game of diplo¬ macy with the Long House .....172, 173 Louis XIV. plans the conquest of New York . . . 174 But the warriors of the Long House checkmate him by in¬ vading Canada ......... 175 James II. undertakes to improve the military strength of the northern colonies by uniting them under a single govern¬ ment ..........176 And sends out Sir Edmund Andros as viceroy . . . 177 New York is accordingly annexed to New England . . 177 Tyrannical rule of Andros in Boston ..... 178 Dr. Mather detains King William s letter . . . .179 Overthrow and imprisonment of Andros .... 179 The old governments restored in New England . . 180 New York is disturbed by rumours of war .... 181 Causes of the anti-Catholic panic .....182 Jacob Leisler refuses to pay duties ..... 183 Character of Leisler.......183, 184 Popular discontent in New York ..... 184, 185 Fears of a French attack upon the city .... 186 Nicholson s rash exclamation ......186 Leisler takes command of Fort James, and issues a Decla¬ ration ..........187 Nicholson sails for England .... . 187 Leisler proclaims William and Mary, and Fort James becomes Fort William .........188 King William s letter arrives in New York . . 188, 189 A committee of safety appoints Leisler to be commander-in- chief ...........189 He assumes the title of lieutenant-governor . . . 190 He needs revenue and revives the Colonial Act of 1683 . 191 His authority is defied ......191, 192 His friend Jacob Milborne returns from a visit to England 192 The French war parties .......193 The situation at Scheneetady ......194 The massacre .........195 Albany yields to Leisler......195, 196 Election of an assembly ; Leisler calls together the first American Congress, May, 1690......196 Unsuccessful attempt to invade Canada .... 197 Frontenac attacks the Long House .....197 χ CONTENTS. The king sends Henry Sloughter to be governor of New York, with Richard Ingoldsby for lieutenant-governor . 198 Leisler loses popularity .......199 Two historical novels .......199, 200 The marriages of Leisler s daughters . . . 200,201 Arrival of Ingoldsby ........ 201 Leisler refuses to surrender Fort William . . , 202 Ingoldsby therefore waits .......202 Leisler fires upon the king s troops .....203 Governor Sloughter arrives, and arrests Milborne and Leis¬ ler ..........203, 204 Trial and sentence of the Leislerites .....204 Execution of Leisler and Milborne .....205 Leisler s purpose was unquestionably honest . . . 206 His motives ..........207 The execution was ill-advised ......208 CHAPTER XIV. THE CITADEL OF AMERICA. Commanding position of the Dutch and Quaker colonies . 209 The war with France .......210, 211 Some effects of the accession of William and Mary . . 211 Sloughter s representative assembly .....212 Death of Sloughter ; Benjamin Fletcher comes to govern New York ..........213 Peter Schuyler, and his influence over the Mohawks . 213, 214 He defeats Frontenac ........215 Party strife between Leislerians and Aristocrats . 215 Fletcher rebukes the assembly ......216 His experience in Philadelphia ...... 217 And at Hartford .........218 Causes leading toward the Stamp Act . . . .219 Penn s plan for a Federal Union .....220, 221 The golden age of piracy ....... 222 The pirates lair on the island of Madagascar . . . 223 Enormous profits of the voyages ..... 224 Effects in the city of New York .....225, 226 William Kidd, and his commission for arresting pirates 226, 227 Fletcher is accused of complicity with the pirates, and is superseded by Lord Bellomont ..... 228 More party strife ; Bellomont s levelling tendencies . . 229 The election of 1699........230 CONTENTS. xi Strange rumours about Kidd ; Bellomont goes to Boston, where he receives a message from him .... 231 How Kidd turned pirate .......232 The King s proclamation ; Kidd s desperate situation . . 233 He lands in Boston ; is arrested and sent to London . . 234 His trial and execution ........ 235 Death of Bellomont ........235 Violent proceedings of the Leislerians .....236 The Aristocrats petition the crown ..... 237 Shameful trial of Bayard and Hutchings .... 237 The air is cleared by the arrival of Lord Cornbury . . 238 The question as to a treasurer for the assembly . . . 239 The governorship of New Jersey is united with that of New York .........239,240 Disputes over salaries ........240 Lord Cornbury s debauchery and debts .... 241 A bootless expedition against Canada .... 241, 242 Visit of five Iroquois chiefs to Queen Anne s court . . 242 Arrival of Robert Hunter as governor .... 242, 243 Another abortive attempt against Canada .... 243 Difficulty of raising money for military purposes . . . 244 Constitutional discussions ......244, 245 Hunter is succeeded by William Burnet .... 245 The Caughnawagas and their trade .....246 Its dangers ..........247 Founding of Oswego, and closer relations with the Mohawk valley .........247,248 William Cosby comes out as governor, and has a dispute with Rip van Dam ........248 William Bradford and John Peter Zenger ; their newspapers 249 Persecution of Zenger ....... 250 An information is filed against him for libel, and his counsel, William Smith and James Alexander, are disbarred for contempt of court ....... 250, 251 Whereupon the venerable Andrew Hamilton comes from Philadelphia to defend him ......251 The words of Zenger s alleged libel .....252 Departing from the English law of that time, Hamilton con¬ tends that the truth of a so-called libel is admissible in evidence ..........253 Great importance of the step thus taken .... 254 Extract from Hamilton s speech .... 254, 255 His peroration .........256 Triumphant acquittal of Zenger .....257 XU CONTENTS. CHAPTER XV. KKIOKERBOCKBB SOCIETY. The city of New York in 1735 ...... 258 The farm of Anneke Jans.......259 Narrow limits of the province ......260 Some causes of its slowness of growth .... 261 Comparative weakness of the assembly ..... 261 Whigs and Tories ........262 Great value of New York at the present day as a doubtful State ..........263 The colonial aristocracy . .....264 The Connecticut type of democracy ..... 264 Peasantry and populace of New York .... 265 The manors and their tenantry ...... 266 Mrs. Grant s description of the Schuyler manor . . . 267 The mansion .........268, 269 The servants quarters ....... 269 The bedrooms . . . »......270 The approaches .........270 The spacious barn ........270, 271 Mrs. Grant s description of Albany .... 272-274 A Flatbush country-house ...... 274, 275 The stoop ..........275 The dining-room ......... 276 The cellar ..........277 The sideboard .........277 Chests and secretaries .......278 Beds ...........279 A specimen inventory ........280 Dress ...........281 Cheerfulness of New York ......282 Amusements and holidays .......283 Clubs and inns ......... 284 Reading and literature ....... . 284 William Smith and Cadwallader Colden .... 285 White servants .........286 Negro slaves ........286, 287 The negro plot of 1712........288 The Great Negro Plot of 1741 .... 288-293 Dread of Catholic priests .......289 The war with Spain ........290 CONTENTS. xiii Hughson s Tavern, and the informer, Mary Burton . . 290 Alarms of fire ......... 291 The alleged conspiracy ; wholesale executions . . . 292 Revulsion of feeling ........ 293 CHAPTER XVI. THE QUAKER COMMONWEALTH. Friendship between William Perni and James II. . . . 294 Maeaulay s hasty charges against Penn .... 295 The Maidä of Taunton ........296 Maeaulay s discreditable blunder .....29*7 Penn was not awake to James s treacherous traits . . 298 The affair of the Seven Bishops .....299, 300 Penn s lack of sympathy with the popular feeling . . 301 Absurd stories about him ....... 302 Suspected of complicity with Jacobite plots .... 302 Anecdote of Penn and Locke ......303 William III. deprives Penn of his proprietary government . 304 George Keith s defection .......304 The King restores Penn s government .....305 His return to Philadelphia .......306 His home and habits ........306 Some democratic questions .......307 Disagreements between Delaware and Pennsylvania . . 309 The revised charter ....... 309-311 Reasons why Penn could not fully sympathize with William III ............311 Could Quakers fight in self-defence ? .... 311 Penn returns to England, leaving John Evans as deputy- governor .......... 312 Evans s folly .........313 Powder money .........314 Penn s wretched son ........ 315 Misdeeds of the Fords .......315, 316 Penn s long illness and death ...... 316 Character and accomplishments of James Logan . . 317, 318 David Lloyd .........318 How Benjamin Franklin sought and found a more liberal intellectual atmosphere in Philadelphia than that of Boston 319 Attitude of Quakers toward learning .....320 The first schools in Pennsylvania . . . . .321 xiv CONTENTS. Printing, and the Bradfords ....... 322 The first American drama ......323 Beginning s of the theatre .......324 Agriculture, commerce, and manufactures . . . 324 Redemptioners ......... 325 Negro slaves ; Quaker opposition to slavery . . . 326 Crimes and punishments .......327 Philanthropy .........327 Andrew Hamilton s tribute to Penn .....328 Significance of Pennsylvania s rapid growth . . 328, 329 CHAPTER XVII. THE MIGRATIONS OF SECTS. New York and Pennsylvania were the principal centres of distribution of the non-English population of the thirteen colonies ..........330 The Jews ; their fortunes in Spain .... 331, 332 Their migration to the Netherlands .....333 Arrivals of Jews in New Netherland and Khode Island 333, 334 The synagogue in New York ......335 Jews in Pennsylvania, South Carolina, and Georgia . . 336 Huguenots ; causes of their failure in France . . . 337 Effect of the extermination of the Albigenses . . 338, 339 Defeat of Coligny s schemes for a Huguenot colony in Amer¬ ica ...........389 First arrivals of Huguenots in New Netherland . . 340 Arrivals of Waldenses and Walloons .... 340, 341 Walloon settlements on the Hudson River . . . 341 Decrees of Louis XIV. against Huguenots . . . 341, 342 The dragonnades ........342 The Huguenot exodus, and its lamentable results for France 342, 343 Huguenots in Massachusetts ......344, 345 Huguenots in New York ; beginnings of New Rochelle 345, 346 The Jay family of Rochelle, and their migration to New York .........346,347 Jay, Laurens, and Boudinot .......347 Benjamin s West s picture of the Commissioners . . 348 Dimensions of the Quaker exodus from England . . . 348 Migration of Mennonites and Dunkers to Pennsylvania . 349 The Ephrata Community .......350 CONTENTS. xv Migration of Palatines to New York and Pennsylvania . 350, 351 Specimen of the Pennsylvania German dialect . . 351, 352 The name Scotch-Irish .......352 The Scotch planting of Ulster ......353 Exodus of Ulster Presbyterians to America .... 354 Difference between Presbyterians in Scotland and in Ireland 354 Union of the Palatinate and Ulster streams of migration in the Appalachian region ......354, 355 Fruitfulness of Dutch ideas ......855, 556 Appendix I. Some Leisler Documents. A. Affidavits against Nicholson .....357 B. Leisler s Commission to be Captain of the Fort . 358 С Leisler s Commission to be Commander-in-Chief 358, 359 D. Schuyler s Protest against Milborne . . . 359, 360 E. Leisler to the Officers of Westehester . . .361 F. Leisler to his Commissioners at Albany . . 362, 363 6. Leisler to Governor Sloughter .... 363, 364 H. Dying Speeches of Leisler and Milborne . . 364-369 Appendix II. Chaetek fob the Pkovince of Penn¬ sylvania, 1681.......370-386 Index ..........387 MAPS. The Duke s Plan, or a Map of New Amsterdam, in 1661 . 62 From a facsimile in Harvard University Library. The original manuscript is in the British Museum. A MS. facsimile, made from the original in 1858 for Dr. G. H. Moore, is now in the possession of the New York His¬ torical Society, and is the source of all the facsimiles printed in America. John Miller s Map of New York in 1695 .... 86 From a facsimile in Harvard University Library. The original MS. is in the British Museum. Part of Holme s Map of Pennsylvania, 1683 . . . .158 From Winsor s America. The original was printed and published in London in 1683, and it has been repub- lished in Philadelphia in 1846, and again in 1870. James Lyne s Map of New York in 1728 ... 258 From an original kindly lent by General James Grant Wilson. I am informed by Mr. Wilberforce Eames that xvi CONTENTS. Mr. W. L. Andrews has an original without the date, which corroborates a suspicion that the date 1728 may have been absent from the map as first issued. Mont- gomerie s Ward, which appears on the map, was not created until 1731.
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The Dutch and Quaker colonies in America
title The Dutch and Quaker colonies in America
title_auth The Dutch and Quaker colonies in America
title_exact_search The Dutch and Quaker colonies in America
title_full The Dutch and Quaker colonies in America 2 by John Fiske
title_fullStr The Dutch and Quaker colonies in America 2 by John Fiske
title_full_unstemmed The Dutch and Quaker colonies in America 2 by John Fiske
title_short The Dutch and Quaker colonies in America
title_sort the dutch and quaker colonies in america
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