The Beginners of a Nation - Part 46
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Part 46

Hornbeck on John Robinson, 158, n. 3.

Horses eaten, 38.

Houses burned for firewood, 40.

Hubbard's History of Ma.s.sachusetts, 308, n. 8; History of New England, 207, m.; 215, m.; 347, n. 3; testimony of, unreliable, 311, n. 17.

Hudson, Henry, influenced by Captain John Smith, seeks the South Sea, 9.

Hudson River gold, 23, n. 7.

Huguenots of La Roch.e.l.le, England allied with, 239.

Humming birds exported, 18.

Hundreds or plantations, 54, 55.

Hunt, Robert, first minister in Virginia, 90.

Hunter, Rev. Joseph, on Shakespeare's Tempest, 65, n. 6.

Hunter's Founders of New Plymouth, 150, m.; 152, m.; 155, m.; 170, m.

Hutchinson, Mrs. Anne, an ardent disciple of Cotton in old Boston, 329; character of, 329, 330; "masterpiece of womens wit," 330; meetings for women opened by, 330; doctrines of, 331; the very apostle of Cotton's doctrine, 333; brought to trial by her opponents, 337; adroit defense, 338; condemned by the General Court, 338; sentenced to banishment, 339; recanted, but was excommunicated, 339, 348, n. 8; her sons disfranchised, 339; settled in Rhode Island with her party, 340; accused of witchcraft by Winthrop, 340; wild reports about, 340, 341; ma.s.sacred by Indians at New Netherland, 341.

Hutchinson on the Virginia Colony, 186, n. 8.

Hutchinson Papers, 215, m.; 299, m.; 307, m.; 329, n. 1.

Hutchinson party partisans of Vane, 332; arrogance of the, 333; Pastor Wilson condemned by, 333.

Hutchinson's History of Ma.s.sachusetts Bay, 211, m.; 337, m.

Hutchinsonian controversy, the, 326, 327; the debate waxed hot, 334.

Hypocrites better than profane persons, 299.

Idolatry, Puritanism a crusade against, 118.

Illusions of discoverers, 3, 75.

Inclosures, effects of, 135, n. 5; for private not the publick good, 136, n. 5.

Independency, tendency toward, 112, 136, n. 6; foreshadowed at Frankfort, 137, n. 6; dated back to reign of Mary, 146; favored by Flemish Protestants, 158, n. 2; Robinsonian, the established religion in New England, 215.

Independents in early years of Elizabeth's reign, 158, n. 2.

Indian children, rewards to colonists for educating, 91.

Indian conjurers laid spell on the coast, 178.

Indian exhumed and eaten at Jamestown, 39.

Indians plot destruction of the colonists, 8; curiosity regarding the, 15; desire to convert, 16, 90; kidnapped and exhibited, 17; attack those first landing in Virginia, 28; constant fear of attack from, 30; supply food to Jamestown, 31, Smith trades with, 34, 36; devilish ingenuity in torturing, 38; outrage the dead, 38, 64, n. 4; slay gold hunters, 43; no danger from, while Dale was in charge, 47; taken to England by Dale, 49, 68, n. 10; unnecessary cruelty to, 64, n. 4; reverence for their sacred house, 64, n. 4; endowed school established for, 83, 91; schemes for educating obliterated, 92; treachery of, emulated by the settlers, 92; destruction of, in Maryland and in Ma.s.sachusetts divinely ordered, 247; right of the king to give away lands of, questioned, 274, 282, 283; land secured from, by purchase, 283.

Industrial disturbance aids the Puritan movement, 111.

Infallibility of "G.o.dly" elders, 301.

Ingram, Davy, crosses the continent, 14; statement, 14, 23, n. 8.

Injunctions by King Edward VI, 138, n. 9.

Interludes sometimes played in churches, 129.

Intolerance sanctioned by logic, 299.

Iron works established at Falling Creek, 83; failure of, 96, n. 6.

Isthmus in lat.i.tude 40, belief in an, 10.

James I framed code of laws and orders for the Virginia colony, 26; Covnter-Blaste to Tobacco, 84; obstinacy of, 87; his accession raised the hopes of the Puritans, 159; paradoxical qualities of, 160; dialectic skill at Hampton Court conference, 160; refutes the hapless Puritans, 161; boasts that he had peppered the Puritans, 162, 182, n. 1; results of his folly, 162; would wink at but not publicly tolerate the Pilgrims, 170; refused guarantee of toleration, 173; friendship with George Calvert, 223; revenue from fines of lay Catholics, 238; Apologie for the Oath of Allegiance, 238.

James, Puritan minister in Maryland, 253.

James River discovered by the accident of a storm, 27; settlement near the falls of the, 37.

James River experiments, the, 25; their story the overture to the history of life in the United States, 58.

Jamestown, causes of suffering at, 13; founded, 29; at first a peninsula, 29; abandoned, 41; population in 1616, 49; in 1889, 59, n. 1; some drawings of, 60, n. 1.

Jamestown Company, the. See VIRGINIA COMPANY, THE.

Jamestown emigrants instructed to explore rivers to the northwest, 9.

Jesuits flock to England, 226; set free, 239; interested in migration to Maryland, 240; the provincial of the Society of Jesus favored toleration, 242; religious observances of, at sea, 243; conversion of non-Catholics in Maryland by, 246; fled to Virginia, 257.

Jesus, the humane pity of, unknown to the laws and sermons of the time, 301, 313, n. 22.

Johnson, Bradley T., Foundation of Maryland, 263, n. 15.

Johnson, Edward, the bloodthirsty Ma.s.sachusetts Puritan, 164; his Wonder-working Providence, 318, m.; 320, m.; 330, m.

Johnson, Francis, voyage of, to America, 167; pastor at Amsterdam, 168.

Johnston, Isaac, of Winthrop's company, death of, 212.