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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 1677 AD or search for 1677 AD in all documents.
Your search returned 19 results in 18 document sections:
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Barclay , Robert , 1648 -1690 (search)
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Berkeley , Sir William , (search)
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Drummond , William , 1677 - (search)
Drummond, William, 1677-
Colonial governor; born in Scotland; was appointed governor of the Albemarle county colony by Sir William Berkeley, governor of Virginia, and joint proprietary of Carolina.
During the Bacon rebellion (see Bacon, Nathaniel), when Berkeley retreated to Accomac, Drummond proposed that Berkeley should be deposed.
This proposition met with the favor of the leading planters, who met at Williamsburg and agreed to support Bacon against the government.
The death of Bacon left the rebellion without a competent leader.
Sir William Berkeley wreaked his vengeance on thirty-three of the principal offenders.
When Drummond was brought before him Berkeley exclaimed: I am more glad to see you than any man in Virginia.
You shall be hanged in half an hour.
He died Jan. 20, 1677.
Dudley, Joseph, 1647-
Colonial governor; born in Roxbury, Mass., July 23, 1647; graduated at Harvard in 1665; prepared for the ministry, but, preferring politics, became a representative in the general court and a magistrate.
From 1677 to 1681 he was one of the commissioners for the united colonies of New England.
He was in the battle with the Narragansets in 1675, and was one of the commissioners who dictated the terms of a treaty with that tribe.
In September, 1685, King James commissioned him president of New England, and in 1687 he was made chief-justice of the Supreme Court.
Dudley was sent to England with Andros in 1689, and the next year was made chief-justice of New York.
He went to England in 1693, and was deputy governor of the Isle of Wight.
He entered Parliament in 1701, and from 1702 to 1715 he was captain-general and governor of Massachusetts.
Then he retired to his quiet home at Roxbury, where he died, April 2, 1720.
The disputes between the royal govern
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Garfield , James Abram 1831 -1881 (search)
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Gorton , Samuel 1600 -1677 (search)
Gorton, Samuel 1600-1677
Clergyman; born in England about 1600; was a clothier in London, and embarked for Boston in 1636, where he soon became entangled in teleological disputes and removed to Plymouth.
There he preached such heterodox doctrines that he was banished as a heretic in the winter of 1637-38.
With a few followers he went to Rhode Island, where he was publicly whipped for calling the magistrates just-asses, and other rebellious acts.
In 1641 he was compelled to leave the isl were taken to Boston and tried as damnable heretics.
For a while they endured confinement and hard labor, in irons, and in 1644 they were banished from the colony.
Gorton went to England and obtained from the Earl of Warwick an order that the clergyman and his followers should have peace at the settlement they had chosen.
He called the place Warwick when he returned to it in 1648.
There he preached on Sunday and performed civil service during the week.
He died in Rhode Island late in 1677.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), North Carolina, State of (search)