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Browsing named entities in Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing). You can also browse the collection for 1610 AD or search for 1610 AD in all documents.
Your search returned 26 results in 22 document sections:
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Berkeley , Sir William , (search)
Berkeley, Sir William,
Colonial governor; born near London about 1610; was brother of Lord John Berkeley, one of the early English proprietors of New Jersey.
Appointed governor of Virginia, he arrived there in February, 1642.
Berkeley was a fine specimen of a young English courtier.
He was then thirty-two years of age. well educated at Oxford, handsome in person, polished by foreign travel, and possessing exquisite taste in dress.
He was one of the most accomplished cavaliers of the day. He adopted some salutary measures in Virginia which made him popular; and at his mansion at Green Spring, not far from Jamestown, he dispensed generous hospitality for many years.
Berkeley was a stanch but not a bigoted royalist at first; and during the civil war in England he managed public affairs in Virginia with so much prudence that a greater proportion of the colonists were in sympathy with him.
In religious matters there was soon perceived the spirit of persecution in the character
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Block , or Blok , Adriaen , 1610 - (search)
Block, or Blok, Adriaen, 1610-
Navigator; born in Amsterdam, Holland.
In 1610 he made a successful voyage to Manhattan (now New York) Bay, taking back to Amsterdam a cargo of rich furs.
In 1614 he bought a merchant ship, the Tiger, and again visited Manhattan.
the Tiger was accidentally destroyed by fire, but with his crew he made a yacht, named the Unrest, and with this explored adjacent waters.
He was the first European to sail through Hell Gate, and he discovered the rivers now known1610 he made a successful voyage to Manhattan (now New York) Bay, taking back to Amsterdam a cargo of rich furs.
In 1614 he bought a merchant ship, the Tiger, and again visited Manhattan.
the Tiger was accidentally destroyed by fire, but with his crew he made a yacht, named the Unrest, and with this explored adjacent waters.
He was the first European to sail through Hell Gate, and he discovered the rivers now known by the names of Housatonic and Connecticut.
The latter he explored as far as the site of Hartford, and still pushing east discovered Block Island, which was named for him. After reaching Cape Cod he left the Unrest, and returned to Holland on one of the ships which had sailed with him on his westward cruise.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Champlain , Samuel de 1567 -1635 (search)
Delaware,
The first of the thirteen original States that ratified the federal Constitution; takes its name from Lord De la Warr (Delaware), who entered the bay of that name in 1610, when he was governor of Virginia.
It had been discovered by Hudson in 1609.
In 1629 Samuel Godyn, a director of the Dutch West India Company, bought of the Indians a tract of land near the mouth of the Delaware; and the next year De Vries, with twenty colonists from Holland, settled near the site of Lewes.
The colony was destroyed by the natives three years afterwards, and the Indians had sole possession of that district until 1638, when a colony of Swedes and Finns
State seal of Delaware. landed on Cape Henlopen, and purchased the lands along the bay and river as far north as the falls at Trenton (see New Sweden). They built Fort Christiana near the site of Wilmington.
Their settlements were mostly planted within the present limits of Pennsylvania.
The Swedes were conquered by the Dutch of
O
Edict of Nantes, the,
An edict promulgated by Henry IV.
of France, which gave toleration to the Protestants in feuds, civil and religious, and ended the religious wars of the country.
It was published April 13, 1598, and was confirmed by Louis XIII.
in 1610, after the murder of his father; also by Louis XIV.
in 1652; but it was revoked by him, Oct. 22, 1685.
It was a great state blunder, for it deprived France of 500,000 of her best citizens, who fled into Germany, England, and America, and gave those countries the riches that flow from industry, skill, and sobriety.
They took with them to England the art of silk-weaving, and so gave France an important rival in that branch of industry.
Hiacoomes,
Indian preacher; born about 1610; became the first Indian convert to Christianity in New England.
When the first white settlers landed at Martha's Vineyard (1642), he was there, and he was converted under the preaching of Thomas Mayhew.
He learned to read, and in 1645 he began to preach to his countrymen.
An Indian church was formed there, and Hiacoomes was ordained pastor, and Tackanash was appointed teacher, by Eliot and Colton.
He died about 1690.
Ingle, Richard 1610-
Mariner; born in London, England, about 1610.
During the civil war in England the royalist governor of Maryland seized Ingle's ship.
On his return to England, Ingle applied to Parliament for redress, and received a commission authorizing him to act against the royalists.
Ingle returned to America in 1645, and, taking advantage of local troubles, expelled Leonard Calvert, and himself took charge of the government for six months, at the end of which period Calvert regaard 1610-
Mariner; born in London, England, about 1610.
During the civil war in England the royalist governor of Maryland seized Ingle's ship.
On his return to England, Ingle applied to Parliament for redress, and received a commission authorizing him to act against the royalists.
Ingle returned to America in 1645, and, taking advantage of local troubles, expelled Leonard Calvert, and himself took charge of the government for six months, at the end of which period Calvert regained control.