The Beginners of a Nation - Part 45
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Part 45

Gorges's Briefe Narration, 196, m.

Gowns and litanies, squabbles about, 107.

Gosnold, agitating for a new colony, 33; failure of colony in Buzzard's Bay established by, 178.

Government, democratic, established by the Pilgrims before sailing, 185, n. 5; three primary steps for, in America, due to Englishmen who did not cross the sea, 205.

Government, representative form of, established, 55, 89; faint promise of, in Maryland charter, 234.

Governmental functions exercised by commercial corporations, 218, n. 8.

Grace after meat opposed by Williams, 289, 290, 292, 309, n. 12.

Greenham's, Richard, MS. on the Sabbath, 128.

Greenwood, leader of the Separatists, hanged at Tyburn, 148.

Grenville, Sir Richard, sent to Virginia by Ralegh, 21, n. 3.

Guiana or North America, Pilgrims choose between, 169.

Guicciardini on use of spices, 22, n. 5.

Guilds, dissolution of the, 111.

Haies in Hakluyt's Voyages, 5, m.

Hakluyt, Richard, a forerunner of colonization, 5; belief of, in a pa.s.sage to the Pacific, 6; stories of gold, 12; of mulberry trees, 76.

Hakluyt's Discourse on Western Planting, 6, m.; 94, n. 1; 97, n. 11; Voyages, 2, 5, m.; 8, m.; 12, m.; 23, n. 8.

Hamor, Raphe, secretary under Dale, a signer of the Tragicall Relation, 66, n. 9; True Discourse, 66, n. 9; 68, n. 12; 70, n. 16; 95, n. 3.

Hampton Court conference, 159; authorities on the, 182, n. 1.

Hanbury's Memorials, 157, n. 1, n. 2; 158, n. 3.

Hanc.o.c.k, Thomas, the Luther of England, 125.

Hanging clemency, 46; preferred to transportation to Virginia, 54; and to the old tyranny, 56.

Hardwicke Papers, 238, m.

Hariot's Briefe and True Report, 80, m.

Harleian Miscellany, 240, m.

Harrington's Nugae Antiquae, 116, m.; 161, m.; 162, m.; 182, n. 1.

Harrisse's, Henry, John Cabot, the Discoverer of America, 21, n. 1.

Hartlib's Reformed Virginia Silkworm, 79.

Harvey, Sir John, sends expedition for gold, 13; Governor of Virginia, 249; quarreled with Virginians, 249; counter-revolution, 249.

Hawkins, Jane, Mrs. Hutchinson an a.s.sociate of, 340.

Hawkins, Sir John, lands luckless seamen in Mexico, 14.

Haynes, Governor of Ma.s.sachusetts, 332; p.r.o.nounced sentence against Williams, 347, n. 1; letter to Williams while Governor of Connecticut quoted, 347, n. 1.

Health to the Gentlemanly Profession of Servingmen, 134, n. 1.

Hearne's Langtoft's Chronicle, 93, m.

Hening's Statutes, 78, m.; 79, m.; 97, n. 9.

Henrietta Maria, Maryland named for, 245; G.o.dmother to Maryland, jealous of Calvert, 249.

Henry, Prince, interested in Virginia colony, 43.

Henry, William Wirt, Address, 63, n. 3.

Hessey's Bampton Lectures, 139, n. 10.

Hind's Making of the England of Elizabeth, 135, n. 3.

Hinman's Antiquities, 347, n. 2.

Hogs, brood, of the colony eaten, 38; wild, in the Bermudas, 41, 65, n. 6.

Holinshed's Chronicles, 22, n. 5.

Holland, the "mingle mangle of religions" in, 164.

Holmes's History of Cambridge, 318, m.; 320, m.

Home, Virginia for the first time a, 58.

Home-makers sent to Virginia, 57, 58.

Homesteads at Newtown sold to newcomers, 325, 347, n. 3.

Hooft, Nederlandsche Historie, 312, n. 18.

Hooker, Thomas, one of the greatest luminaries of the Puritans, 269; desire of his party to move to Connecticut, 285, 315; set to dispute with Williams, 292; early life of, 316; driven from his pulpit by Laud, 317; fled to Holland, 317; a company of his people settled at Newtown, 317; arrival at Newtown, 319; rivalry with Cotton, 320; somber theology of, 320; difference between his teachings and those of Cotton, 321, 346, n. 1; theories of civil government more liberal than Cotton's, 322; limited the power of the magistrate, 322, 347, n. 2; the real founder of Connecticut, 325.