Читать книгу The History of Virginia, in Four Parts - Beverley Robert - Страница 8
THE TABLE.
ОглавлениеHistory of the first attempts to settle Virginia, before the discovery of Chesapeake bay.
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§1. | Sir Walter Raleigh obtains letters patent, for making discoveries in America, | 8 |
2. | Two ships set out on the discovery, and arrive at Roanoke inlet, | 9 |
Their account of the country, | 9 | |
thier account of the natives, | 9 | |
3. | Queen Elizabeth names the country of Virginia, | 10 |
4. | Sir Richard Greenvile's voyage, | 10 |
He plans the first colony, under command of Mr. Ralph Lane, | 11 | |
5. | The discoveries and accidents of the first colony, | 11 |
6. | Their distress by want of provisions, | 12 |
Sir Francis Drake visits them, | 12 | |
He gives them a ship and necessaries, | 12 | |
He takes them away with him, | 12 | |
7. | Sir Walter Raleigh and Sir Richard Greenvile, their voyages, | 13 |
The second settlement made, | 13 | |
8. | Mr. John White's expedition, | 13 |
The first Indian made a Christian there, | 14 | |
The first child born there of Christian parentage, | 14 | |
Third settlement, incorporated by the name of the city of Raleigh, in Virginia, | 14 | |
Mr. White, their governor, sent home to solicit for supplies, | 14 | |
9. | John White's second voyage; last attempts to carry them recruits, | 14 |
His disappointment, | 15 | |
10. | Capt. Gosnell's voyage to the coast of Cape Cod, | 15 |
11. | The Bristol voyages, | 16 |
12. | A London voyage, which discovered New York, | 16 |
Discovery of Chesapeake bay by the corporation of London adventurers; their colony at Jamestown, and proceedings during the government by an elective president and council.
§13. | The companies of London and Plymouth obtain charters, | 18 |
14. | Captain Smith first discovers the capes of Virginia, | 19 |
15. | He plants his first colony at Jamestown, | 20 |
An account of Jamestown island, | 20 | |
16. | He sends the ships home, retaining one hundred and eight men to keep possession, | 20 |
17. | That colony's mismanagement, | 21 |
Their misfortunes upon discovery of a supposed gold mine, | 21 | |
18. | Their first supplies after settlement, | 22 |
Their discoveries, and experiments in English grain, | 22 | |
An attempt of some to desert the colony, | 22 | |
19. | The first Christian marriage in that colony, | 23 |
They make three plantations more, | 23 |
History of the colony after the change of their government, from an elective president to a commissionated governor, until the dissolution of the company.
§20. | The company get a new grant, and the nomination of the governors in themselves, | 24 |
They send three governors in equal degree, | 24 | |
All three going in one ship, are shipwrecked at Bermudas, | 24 | |
They build there two small cedar vessels, | 24 | |
21. | Captain Smith's return to England, | 25 |
Mismanagements ruin the colony, | 25 | |
The first massacre and starving time, | 25 | |
The first occasion of the ill character of Virginia, | 26 | |
The five hundred men left by Captain Smith reduced to sixty in six months time, | 26 | |
22. | The three governors sail from Bermudas, and arrive at Virginia, | 26 |
23. | They take off the Christians that remained there, and design, by way of Newfoundland, to return to England, | 27 |
Lord Delaware arrives and turns them back, | 27 | |
24. | Sir Thomas Dale arrives governor, with supplies, | 27 |
25. | Sir Thomas Gates arrives governor, | 28 |
He plants out a new plantation, | 28 | |
26. | Pocahontas made prisoner, and married to Mr. Rolfe, | 28 |
27. | Peace with the Indians, | 28 |
28. | Pocahontas brought to England by Sir Thomas Dale, | 29 |
29. | Captain Smith's petition to the queen in her behalf, | 29 |
30. | His visit to Pocahontas, | 32 |
An Indian's account of the people of England, | 32 | |
31. | Pocahontas' reception at court, and death, | 33 |
32. | Captain Yardley's government, | 34 |
33. | Governor Argall's good administration, | 34 |
34. | Powhatan's death, and successors, | 34 |
Peace renewed by the successors, | 34 | |
35. | Captain Argall's voyage from Virginia to New England, | 35 |
36. | He defeats the French northward of New England, | 35 |
37. | An account of those French, | 36 |
38. | He also defeats the French in Acadia, | 36 |
39. | His return to England, | 36 |
Sir George Yardley, governor, | 36 | |
40. | He resettles the deserted plantation, and held the first assembly, | 36 |
The method of that assembly, | 37 | |
41. | The first negroes carried to Virginia, | 37 |
42. | Land apportioned to adventurers, | 37 |
43. | A salt work and iron work in Virginia, | 38 |
44. | Sir Francis Wyat made governor, | 38 |
King James, his instructions in care of tobacco, | 38 | |
Captain Newport's plantation, | 38 | |
45. | Inferior courts in each plantation, | 39 |
Too much familiarity with the Indians, | 39 | |
46. | The massacre by the Indians, anno 1622, | 39 |
47. | The discovery and prevention of it at Jamestown, | 40 |
48. | The occasion of the massacre, | 41 |
49. | A plot to destroy the Indians, | 42 |
50. | The discouraging effects of the massacre, | 43 |
51. | The corporation in England are the chief cause of misfortunes in Virginia, | 43 |
52. | The company dissolved, and the colony taken into the king's hands, | 44 |
History of the government, from the dissolution of the company to the year 1707.
§53. | King Charles First establishes the constitution of government, in the methods appointed by the first assembly, | 45 |
54. | The ground of the ill settlement of Virginia, | 45 |
55. | Lord Baltimore in Virginia, | 46 |
56. | Lord Baltimore, proprietor of Maryland, | 46 |
Maryland named from the queen, | 46 | |
57. | Young Lord Baltimore seats Maryland, | 46 |
Misfortune to Virginia, by making Maryland a distinct government, | 47 | |
58. | Great grants and defalcations from Virginia, | 47 |
59. | Governor Harvey sent prisoner to England, and by the king remanded back governor again, | 47 |
60. | The last Indian massacre, | 48 |
61. | A character and account of Oppechancanough, the Indian emperor, | 48 |
62. | Sir William Berkeley made governor, | 49 |
63. | He takes Oppechancanough prisoner, | 49 |
Oppechancanough's death, | 50 | |
64. | A new peace with the Indians, but the country disturbed by the troubles in England, | 50 |
65. | Virginia subdued by the protector, Cromwell, | 50 |
66. | He binds the plantations by an act of navigation, | 51 |
67. | His jealousy and change of governors in Virginia, | 51 |
68. | Upon the death of Matthews, the protector's governor, Sir William Berkeley is chosen by the people, | 52 |
69. | He proclaims King Charles II before he was proclaimed in England, | 52 |
70. | King Charles II renews Sir William Berkeley's commission, | 52 |
71. | Sir William Berkeley makes Colonel Morrison deputy governor, and goes to England, | 53 |
The king renews the act concerning the plantation, | 53 | |
72. | The laws revised, | 53 |
The church of England established by law, | 53 | |
73. | Clergy provided for by law, | 53 |
74. | The public charge of the government sustained by law, | 53 |
75. | Encouragement of particular manufactures by law, | 54 |
76. | The instruction for all ships to enter at Jamestown, used by law, | 54 |
77. | Indian affairs settled by law, | 54 |
78. | Jamestown encouraged by law, | 54 |
79. | Restraints upon sectaries in religion, | 55 |
80. | A plot to subvert the government, | 55 |
81. | The defeat of the plot, | 55 |
82. | An anniversary feast upon that occasion, | 56 |
83. | The king commands the building a fort at Jamestown, | 56 |
84. | A new restraint on the plantations by act of parliament, | 56 |
85. | Endeavors for a stint in planting tobacco, | 56 |
86. | Another endeavor at a stint defeated, | 57 |
87. | The king sent instructions to build forts, and confine the trade to certain ports, | 57 |
88. | The disappointment of those ports, | 58 |
89. | Encouragement of manufactures enlarged, | 58 |
90. | An attempt to discovery the country backward, | 59 |
Captain Batt's relation of that discovery, | 59 | |
91. | Sir William Berkeley intends to prosecute that discovery in person, | 60 |
92. | The grounds of Bacon's rebellion, | 60 |
Four ingredients thereto, | 61 | |
93. | First, the low price of tobacco, | 61 |
Second, splitting the country into proprieties, | 61 | |
The country send agents, to complain of the propriety grants, | 61 | |
94. | Third, new duties by act in England on the plantations, | 62 |
95. | Fourth, disturbances on the land frontiers by the Indians, | 62 |
First, by the Indians on the head of the bay, | 62 | |
Second, by the Indians on their own frontiers, | 63 | |
96. | The people rise against the Indians, | 63 |
They choose Nathan Bacon, Jr., for their leader, | 63 | |
97. | He heads them, and sends to the governor for a commission, | 64 |
98. | He begins his march without a commission, | 64 |
The governor sends for him, | 65 | |
99. | Bacon goes down in a sloop with forty of his men to the governor, | 65 |
100. | Goes away in a huff, is pursued and brought back by governor, | 65 |
101. | Bacon steals privately out of town, and marches down to the assembly with six hundred of his volunteers, | 65 |
102. | The governor, by advice of assembly, signs a commission to Mr. Bacon to be general, | 66 |
103. | Bacon being marched away with his men is proclaimed rebel, | 66 |
104. | Bacon returns with his forces to Jamestown, | 66 |
105. | The governor flies to Accomac, | 66 |
The people there begin to make terms with him, | 67 | |
106. | Bacon holds a convention of gentlemen, | 67 |
They propose to take an oath to him, | 67 | |
107. | The forms of the oath, | 67 |
108. | The governor makes head against him, | 69 |
General Bacon's death, | 69 | |
109. | Bacon's followers surrender upon articles, | 69 |
110. | The agents compound with the proprietors, | 69 |
111. | A new charter to Virginia, | 70 |
112. | Soldiers arrive from England, | 70 |
113. | The dissolution by Bacon's rebellion, | 70 |
114. | Commissioners arrive in Virginia, and Sir William Berkeley returns to England, | 71 |
115. | Herbert Jeffreys, esq., governor, concludes peace with Indians, | 71 |
116. | Sir Henry Chicheley, deputy governor, builds forts against Indians, | 71 |
The assembly prohibited the importation of tobacco, | 72 | |
117. | Lord Colepepper, governor, | 72 |
118. | Lord Colepepper's first assembly, | 72 |
He passes several obliging acts to the country, | 72 | |
119. | He doubles the governor's salary, | 72 |
120. | He imposes the perquisite of ship money, | 73 |
121. | He, by proclamation, raises the value of Spanish coins, and lowers it again, | 73 |
122. | Sir Henry Chicheley, deputy governor, | 74 |
The plant cutting, | 74 | |
123. | Lord Colepepper's second assembly, | 75 |
He takes away appeals to the assembly, | 75 | |
124. | His advantage thereby in the propriety of the Northern Neck, | 76 |
125. | He retrenches the new methods of court proceedings, | 77 |
126. | He dismantled the forts on the heads of rivers, and appointed rangers in their stead, | 77 |
127. | Secretary Spencer, president, | 77 |
128. | Lord Effingham, governor, | 77 |
Some of his extraordinary methods of getting money, | 77 | |
Complaints against him, | 78 | |
129. | Duty on liquors first raised, | 78 |
130. | Court of Chancery by Lord Effingham, | 78 |
131. | Colonel Bacon, president, | 79 |
The college designed, | 79 | |
132. | Francis Nicholson, lieutenant governor, | 79 |
He studies popularity, | 79 | |
The college proposed to him, | 79 | |
He refuses to call an assembly, | 79 | |
133. | He grants a brief to the college, | 79 |
134. | The assembly address King William and Queen Mary for a college charter, | 80 |
The education intended by this college, | 80 | |
The assembly present the lieutenant governor, | 80 | |
His method of securing this present, | 80 | |
135. | Their majesties grant the charter, | 80 |
They grant liberally towards the building and endowing of it, | 80 | |
136. | The lieutenant governor encourages towns and manufactures, | 80 |
Gentlemen of the council complain of him and are misused, | 81 | |
He falls off from the encouragement of the towns and trade, | 81 | |
137. | Edmund Andros, governor, | 81 |
The town law suspended, | 81 | |
138. | The project of a post office, | 81 |
139. | The college charter arrived, | 81 |
The college further endowed, and the foundation laid, | 82 | |
140. | Sir Edmund Andros encourages manufactures, and regulates the secretary's office, | 82 |
141. | A child born in the old age of the parents, | 83 |
142. | Francis Nicholson, governor, | 83 |
His and Colonel Quarrey's memorials against plantations, | 84 | |
143. | His zeal for the church and college, | 84 |
144. | He removes the general court from Jamestown, | 84 |
145. | The taking of the pirate, | 84 |
146. | The sham bills of nine hundred pounds for New York, | 86 |
147. | Colonel Quarrey's unjust memorials, | 87 |
148. | Governor Nott arrived, | 88 |
149. | Revisal of the law finished, | 88 |
150. | Ports and towns again set on foot, | 88 |
151. | Slaves a real estate, | 88 |
152. | A house built for the governor, | 88 |
Governor dies, and the college burnt, | 88 | |
153. | Edmond Jennings, esq., president, | 89 |
154. | Alexander Spotswood, lieutenant governor, | 89 |
Natural Productions and Conveniences of Virginia in its unimproved state, before the English went thither.
Bounds and Coast of Virginia.
§1. | Present bounds of Virginia, | 90 |
2. | Chesapeake bay, and the sea coast of Virginia, | 91 |
3. | What is meant by the word Virginia in this book, | 91 |
Of the Waters.
§4. | Conveniency of the bay and rivers, | 93 |
5. | Springs and fountains descending to the rivers, | 93 |
6. | Damage to vessels by the worm, | 94 |
Ways of avoiding that damage, | 94 |
Earths, and Soils.
§7. | The soil in general, | 96 |
River lands—lower, middle and upper, | 96 | |
8. | Earths and clays, | 98 |
Coal, slate and stone, and why not used, | 98 | |
9. | Minerals therein, and iron mine formerly wrought upon, | 98 |
Supposed gold mines lately discovered, | 99 | |
That this gold mine was the supreme seat of the Indian temples formerly, | 99 | |
That their chief altar was there also, | 99 | |
Mr. Whitaker's account of a silver mine, | 99 | |
10. | Hills in Virginia, | 100 |
Springs in the high lands, | 101 |
Wild Fruits.
§11. | Spontaneous fruits in general, | 102 |
12. | Stoned fruits, viz: cherries, plums and persimmons, | 102 |
13. | Berries, viz: mulberries, currants, hurts, cranberries, raspberries and strawberries, | 103 |
14. | Of nuts, | 104 |
15. | Of grapes, | 105 |
The report of some French vignerons formerly sent in thither, | 107 | |
16. | Honey, and the sugar trees, | 107 |
17. | Myrtle tree, and myrtle wax, | 108 |
Hops growing wild, | 109 | |
18. | Great variety of seeds, plants and flowers, | 109 |
Two snake roots, | 109 | |
Jamestown weed, | 110 | |
Some curious flowers, | 111 | |
19. | Creeping vines bearing fruits, viz: melons, pompions, macocks, gourds, maracocks, and cushaws, | 112 |
20. | Other fruits, roots and plants of the Indians, | 114 |
Several sorts of Indian corn, | 114 | |
Of potatoes, | 115 | |
Tobacco, as it was ordered by the Indians, | 116 |