HISTORY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK |
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Page 7
... mean- while send the Concord home , in charge of Gilbert , " for new and better preparations . " But his men ... means be treated with to tarry behind the ship ; " and Gosnold returned to England , after an absence of five months , with ...
... mean- while send the Concord home , in charge of Gilbert , " for new and better preparations . " But his men ... means be treated with to tarry behind the ship ; " and Gosnold returned to England , after an absence of five months , with ...
Page 9
... means , under God , of putting on foot and giving life to all our plantations . " ‡ * Purchas , iv . , 1654 . + Rymer , Federa , xvi . , 516 . Sir F. Gorges , " Brief Narration , " & c . , in Mass . Hist . Coll . , xxvi . , 50 , 51 ...
... means , under God , of putting on foot and giving life to all our plantations . " ‡ * Purchas , iv . , 1654 . + Rymer , Federa , xvi . , 516 . Sir F. Gorges , " Brief Narration , " & c . , in Mass . Hist . Coll . , xxvi . , 50 , 51 ...
Page 14
... mean time , the colonists on the Kennebeck had not been forgotten by their principals at home . In the course of the ... means would stay any lon- ger in the country . " They therefore " all embarked in this * Sir John Popham died on the ...
... mean time , the colonists on the Kennebeck had not been forgotten by their principals at home . In the course of the ... means would stay any lon- ger in the country . " They therefore " all embarked in this * Sir John Popham died on the ...
Page 23
... means of humbling their arrogant enemy on the very seas from which Philip was endeavoring to shut out the com- merce of the republic ; and besides the mercantile advant- ages which would result from securing the traffic with those ...
... means of humbling their arrogant enemy on the very seas from which Philip was endeavoring to shut out the com- merce of the republic ; and besides the mercantile advant- ages which would result from securing the traffic with those ...
Page 24
... means for an expedition , they intrusted the command to a skillful and experienced mariner , Henry Hudson , a native of En- gland , and a friend of the famous Captain John Smith , who had just before sailed with the first colony for ...
... means for an expedition , they intrusted the command to a skillful and experienced mariner , Henry Hudson , a native of En- gland , and a friend of the famous Captain John Smith , who had just before sailed with the first colony for ...
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Common terms and phrases
afterward Amst Amster Amsterdam Chamber April arrived August authority Bancroft Beverwyck burgomasters Cape Captain CHAP charter chief Church Classis colonists colony command commissary commonalty company's Connecticut Curaçoa director and council dispatched Donck Dutch emigrants England English erland Esopus Fatherland Fort Amsterdam Fort Christina Fort Nassau Fort Orange governor granted Gravesend guilders Hague Hartford Haven Hazard Heemstede Hist Holland hundred Indians inhabitants Iroquois July June Kieft king Laet land letter Long Island Lord magistrates Mahicans Manhattan March Massachusetts ment Minuit Mohawks N. Y. H. S. Coll neighboring Neth Netherland North O'Call October Orange pany patent patroon peace Plymouth province Puritans Renss Rensselaerswyck sachem sailed savages schepens schout sent Sept settlement ship soon South River stadtholder sterdam Stuyve Stuyvesant Stuyvesant's Swaanendael Swedes territory tion trade treaty tribes vessels viii village Virginia visited voyage Vries Wassenaar West India Company Winthrop xviii
Popular passages
Page 179 - Upon the hill they have a large square house, with a flat roof, made of thick sawn plank, stayed with oak beams, upon the top of which they have six cannons, which shoot iron balls of four and five pounds, and command the surrounding country. The lower part they use for their church, where they preach on Sundays and the usual holidays.
Page 128 - So they left that goodly and pleasant city, which had been their resting-place near twelve years ; but they knew they were PILGRIMS, and looked not much on those things, but lifted up their eyes to the heavens, their dearest country, and quieted their spirits.
Page 358 - The traders whom your first ships left on our shore, to traffic till their return, were cherished by us as the apple of our eye : we gave them our daughters for their wives ; among those whom you have murdered were children of your own blood.
Page 115 - Being now come into the Low Countries, they saw many goodly and fortified cities, strongly walled and guarded with troops of armed men. Also, they heard a strange and uncouth language, and beheld the different manners and customs of the people, with their strange fashions and attires; all so far differing from that of their plain country villages (wherein they were bred and had so long lived) as it seemed they were come into a new world.
Page 189 - First actually possessed or inhabited by any other Christian Prince or State, * or were within the Bounds, Limits or Territories of the...
Page 121 - Lord,) considering, amongst many other inconveniences, how hard the country was where we lived, how many spent their estate in it and were forced to return for England, how grievous to live from under the protection of the State of England, how like we were to lose our language and our name of English...