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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 1634 AD or search for 1634 AD in all documents.
Your search returned 29 results in 25 document sections:
Agawam,
The Indian name of Ipswich, Mass.; settled in 1633; incorporated under the present name in 1634.
See Boston; Massachusetts.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Bellingham , Richard , 1592 - (search)
Bellingham, Richard, 1592-
Colonial governor; born in England in 1592.
Bred a lawyer, he came to America in 1634, and was chosen deputy governor of Massachusetts the next year.
He was elected governor, in opposition to Winthrop, in 1641.
He was rechosen in 1654, and in 1666, after the death of Governor Endicott, continuing in office the rest of his life.
His administration was a somewhat stormy one.
Bellingham was so opposed to all innovations in religious matters that he was severe in his conduct towards the Friends, or Quakers.
He died Dec. 7, 1672.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Blackstone , William , -1675 (search)
Blackstone, William, -1675
Pioneer, supposed to have been graduated at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, in 1617, and to have become a minister in the Church of England.
In 1623 he removed from Plymouth to the peninsula of Shawmut, where Boston now stands, and was living there in 1630, when Governor Winthrop arrived at Charlestown.
On April 1. 1633, he was given a grant of fifty acres. but not liking his Puritan neighbors he sold his estate in 1634.
He then moved to a place a few miles north of Providence.
locating on the river which now bears his name.
He is said to have planted the first orchard in Rhode Island, and also the first one in Massachusetts.
He was the first white settler in Rhode Island, but took no part in the founding of the colony.
The cellar of the house where he lived is still shown, and a little hill near by where he was accustomed to read is known as Study Hill.
He died in Rehoboth Mass., May 26, 1675.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Claypoole , James 1634 - (search)
Claypoole, James 1634-
Settler; born in England in 1634; a Quaker, and a close friend of William Penn; was a witness of the signing of the Charter of Privileges granted to the settlers in 1682; came with his family to Pennsylvania in 1683, and held important offices.
Claypoole, James 1634-
Settler; born in England in 1634; a Quaker, and a close friend of William Penn; was a witness of the signing of the Charter of Privileges granted to the settlers in 1682; came with his family to Pennsylvania in 1683, and held important offices.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Coke , Sir Edward 1552 -1634 (search)
Coke, Sir Edward 1552-1634
Jurist; born at Mileham, Norfolk, England, Feb. 1, 1552; educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, Clifford's Inn, and the Inner Temple; began the practice of law in 1578, and quickly rose to the highest rank.
Passing through different grades of judicial office, he became lord chief-justice of England, opposed in his whole course by a powerful rival, Francis Bacon.
Coke was a violent and unscrupulous man, and carried his points in court and in politics by sheer audacity, helped by tremendous intellectual force.
As attorney-general, he conducted the prosecution of Sir Walter Raleigh with shameful unfairness; and from the beginning of his reign King James I. feared and hated him, but failed to suppress him. Coke was in the privy council and in Parliament in 1621 when the question of monopolies by royal grants was brought before the House in the case of the council of Plymouth and the New England fisheries.
Coke took ground against the validity of the pat
Colonial commissions.
The first of two notable royal commissions to what is now the United States was sent out in 1634.
Morton of Merry Mount had made serious charges against the people of Massachusetts before the privy council.
That body summoned the council for New England before them to answer the charges.
They denied having had anything to do with the matters complained of, and added new and serious charges of their own, declaring themselves unable to redress their grievances.
They referred the whole matter to the privy council.
A commission of twelve persons was appointed, with Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, at its head, to whom full power was given to revise the laws, to regulate the Church, and to revoke charters.
The members of the Massachusetts Company in England were called upon to give up their patent, and Governor Cradock wrote for it to be sent over.
Morton wrote to one of the old planters that a governor-general had been appointed.
Orders were also issued to
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Danforth , Thomas , 1622 -1699 (search)
Danforth, Thomas, 1622-1699
Colonial governor; born in Suffolk, England, in 1622; settled in New England in 1634; was an assistant under the governor of Massachusetts in 1659-78; became deputy governor in 1679; during the same year was elected president of the province of Maine; and was also a judge of the Superior Court, in which capacity he strongly condemned the action of the court in the witchcraft excitement of 1692.
He died in Cambridge, Mass., Nov. 5, 1699.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Dongan , Thomas , 1634 -1715 (search)
Dongan, Thomas, 1634-1715
Colonial governor; born in Castletown, county Kildare, Ireland, in 1634; a younger son of an Irish baronet; was a colonel in the royal army, and served under the French King.
In 1678 he was appointed lieutenant-governor of Tangier, Africa, whence he was recalled in 1680.
The relations between England and France were then delicate, and Dongan being a Roman Catholic, like the proprietor of New York, he was chosen by Duke James governor of that province (1683), as i1634; a younger son of an Irish baronet; was a colonel in the royal army, and served under the French King.
In 1678 he was appointed lieutenant-governor of Tangier, Africa, whence he was recalled in 1680.
The relations between England and France were then delicate, and Dongan being a Roman Catholic, like the proprietor of New York, he was chosen by Duke James governor of that province (1683), as it was thought his experience in France might make it easier to keep up friendly relations with the French on the borders.
Dongan caused a company of merchants in New York to be formed for the management of the fisheries at Pemaquid, a part of the duke's domain, and he took measures to protect the territory from encroachments.
Dongan managed the relations between the English, French, and Indians with dexterity.
He was not deceived by the false professions of the French rulers or the wiles of