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Agesilaus, cited, 398.
Agmenticus, 120.

Albemarle colony. (See North Caro-
lina.)

Alhambra, surrender of, 485.
Aliaco, Pedro de, Cardinal, 470.
America, discovery of, 472; first is-
land, 490; meaning of, 501; who
first saw, 511; first Jew in, Dr.
Kayserling on, 510-513.
American causes of discontent,
Franklin on, 595; principles
argued, 602-603.

Amherst, Gen', 369; and the French
and Indian War, 370.
Anabaptist, 164.

Andover, church of, 153.
Andros, 124, 567.

Antilia, Island of, 483.
Applegarth, Dr. A. C., on Quakers
in Pennsylvania, 385-464.
Archdale, John, and the Quakers in
North Carolina, 271–272.
Aristotle, view of the world, 473;
Heavens," 474; E. J. Payne,
quoted, note 474.

66

Asia, route of reaching, 476.
Atlantis, continent of, 473.
Azores, 480.

B

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lished Church in North Carolina,
279.

Baptists, law against, 115, 164; per- | Bray, Rev. Thomas, and the Estab-
secution of, 121, 137; in Boston,
144, 145; in Rehoboth, 144; under
Plymouth colony, 151; increase
of, 155; prominent men, 156; in
Mass., 161, 162, 164; effort of,
during Revolution period, 177;
Free-Will Anti-pedo, 183.
Barrowists, 99.

Barry, prison writings of, 100.
Bartholomew, brother of Columbus,

481.

Beaconsfield, Lord, quoted, 558.
Beardsley, Dr., quoted, 145.
Beecher, Dr. Lyman, cited, 182.
Bennington, church in, 132; Dec-
laration of Rights, 132.
Berglund, Andreas, 27; becomes the
guardian of Eric Janson's son.
Berkeley, Sir William, 251, 253.
Bertrand, Paul, 234.

Bill of Rights, 166, 172, cited, 183;
of Maine, 184; of Massachusetts,
185; Amendment, 188.
Bishop Hill Colony, the, M. A. Mik-
kelsen on, 1-80; the first Settle-
ment of, 29; origin of the name
of, 37; incorporation of, 48, 89;
community of, 51; economical as-
pect of, 52, 53; social aspect of, 54,
55; introduction of the doctrine of
celibacy, 56; education among, 57;
religious aspect of, 58; internal
dissensions among, 64-68; dissolu-
tion of, 68; causes of failure, 69,
70; causes of success, 70; the pres-
ent town of Bishop Hill, 71; char-
ter of, 73, 74; the old by-laws of,
74-76; the new by-laws of, 76-80.
Biskopskulla Parish, 16.

Black, Dr. J. William, on Maryland's
attitude in the struggle for Canada,
311-379.

Blair, Rev. John, and his mission in
North Carolina, 280–281.
Blest, Islands of, 480.

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Brewster, William, 100; Elder, 152.
Brown, Robert, and his doctrine, 99.
Brownists, rise and doctrine of, 99;
leaders of, 99; in Holland, 100-
101; reasons for their removal to
America, 102; idea of relation of
Church and State, 107.
Browne, Dr. William Hand, quoted,
204, 205.
Buck, quoted, 165.
Bulkeley, 145.

Burgess, Bishop, 188.
Burke, Edmund, quoted, 435, 580,
581, 595; his speeches and consti-
tutional rights, 599; on colonies,
602.

C

California, discoveries of gold in, 45.
Callender, Mr. Ellis, 156.
Calvert, Baltimore's sec'y, 326; at-
tempts to bribe the assembly, 375,
376.
Calvert, Charles, his letter quoted,
209.

Calvinistic, state church, 188.
Cambridge Platform, 116.
Canada, ceded to England, 561, 562.
Canal, the Illinois and Michigan,
construction of, 58, 59.

Canary Islands, discovery of, 473, 480.
Canterbury, Archbishop of, his letter
quoted, 227, 228.

Cape Fear, settlement of, 253.
Cape Non, 480.

Cape of Good Hope, 473.
Cape Porpoise, 120.

Cary, Col., and William Glover, 293–
297; and the Cary rebellion, 297-
300.

Cary Rebellion, the missionary Gor-
don's account of, 288; the causes
of, 291, 292; outbreak of, 297; end
of, 300; result of, 300, 301.
Castelar, Spanish statesman, 485.
Cathay, 482.

Catholics and Protestants, relative
power in early Maryland, 215-
218; treatment of, 370-372.
Certificate, system and argument,
165; for dissenters, 174.

Charles Francis Adrian, 495.
Charles II, and franchise, 142; letters
to Massachusetts, 143; and charters
of Maryland, 251.
Chalmers, quoted, 437.
Charters, of 1691 in Massachusetts,
117, 151; in N. H., 124; pro-
visions for liberty of conscience,
117; of 1639, 119; of William
and Mary, 122; of 1644, 129; of
1663, 130; history of religious lib-
erty, 167; of Maryland, concerning
religion, 193-199

Cheshire, Rev. J. B., quoted, 248.
Chipman, Hon. Daniel, and Memoir
of Thomas Chittenden, 172.
Choiseul, quoted, 563.
Cholera, Asiatic, 35, 36.
Christison, 135.

Church of England, attempt to estab-
lish in Maryland, 225-234; estab-
lishment of, 237-238.

Church, the Established, in North
Carolina, the first struggle with the
Dissenters, 272-276; the second
struggle, 277-300.
Churchman, John, 444.
Cipango, 483.

Clayton, Rev. Mr. 426.
Clifton, Mr. Richard, 100.
Colbert, and his policy, 560, 570.
Coleridge, 409.

Colonies and England, relation, Eng-
lish side, 587; American view, 588.
Colony, comparison of Greek, Roman,
and modern idea of a colony, 564-
566.
Columbus, Christopher, and Dis-
covery of America, Dr. H. B.
Adams on, 472-503; foresight of,
471; immortal deeds of, 472; re-
lation to poet-prophets, 475-476;
to schoolmen, etc., 476; his letter
to Ferdinand, 478; his summary
of classical reading, 478; his youth,
480; good example to, 481; his
first appeal, 484; final triumph,
485; origin of equipment, 486;
his departure, 486; announcement
of discovery, 489; his first idea of
America, 490; his "blunder" and
contribution, 490; critics on, 491,
493; prerogatives, note, 492; his
later letters, 492; a royal captive,
493; his death, 493; his low estate,

note, 494; relics of, 500; his real
object, 504; his religious sincerity,
505; a crusader, 505; memory of,
506; bibliographies of, 524-530.
Columbus Monuments, Baltimore, 534;
Barcelona, 549; Columbus, O., 541;
Genoa, 547, 549; Granada, 551
Harrisburg, 539; Madrid, 548
New York, 537; Palos, 549; Wat-
ling's Island, 543; Washington,
541; Statues; Baltimore, 539; Bos-
ton, 535, 536, 539; Cardenas, 542;
Chicago, 540; Colon, Cuba, 544;
Colon, Panama, 546; Genoa, 550;
Havana, 543; Isabella, 544; Lima,
545; Madrid, 550; Mexico, 546;
Nassau, 542; New York, 536;
Philadelphia, 537; Sacramento,
Cal., 537; Santo Domingo, 543;
St. Louis, 537; Valparaiso, 547;
Washington, 535; Willimantic,
Conn., 540; Busts; Brooklyn, 540;
Cogoleto, 548; Genoa, 550; Ha-
vana, 544; New York, 540; Pavia,
548; Rome, 551; Santiago, 547;
Washington, 540; Arch; Barcel-
ona, 551; New York, 538; Foun-
tains; Colon, Panama, 546; Mad-
rid, 551; New York, 541; Custodia,
Genoa, 547; Tablet, Havana, 542;
Medallion, Newark, 540; Painting
and door, Washington, 535, 536;
Portraits, 552.

Communism, Jansonists' idea of, 27.
Congregational, 187; and Unitarian,
187.

Congress, address to English, 614.
Connecticut, colony of, 125; Puritan

colony, 126; first Church, 125; re-
lation of Church and State, 126;
Congregational order approved in,
127; condition of in 1680, 127;
toleration law, 137; franchise in,
138; breaking up of town-church
system, 153; law of 1784, 171;
law of 1791, cited, 181.
Constitution, of Massachusetts, 165;
Federal, concerning religious free-
dom, 177; amendments, 178.
Convention, the Albany, 316, 324.
Copley, Mr., his letter, quoted, 205.
Cornelius, C. A., quoted, 14.
County Court, 116.
Cranfield, 124.
Cranmer, 95.

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Dably, Mr., 463.

D

D'Ailly, Cardinal, "Imago Mundi,"
quoted, 477.

Danforth, Thomas, 121.

Daniel, Col. Robert, and the Vestry
Act, 279.

Dante, quoted, 475.
Darien, 473.

Davenport, John, and his sermon, 125.
Davenport, Rev. Mr, 141.

Declaration of Independence, quoted,
557, 569, 570.

Declaration of Rights, 593; basis of,
593; Declaratory Act, 604; John
Adams and Franklin on, 604;
Townshend on, 605.

Dedham case, cited, 187.

De Garden, historian, quoted, 589.
Denny, Gov. William, of Pennsyl-

vania, 363.

De Puy, quoted, 132.

Dunster, Pres., of Harvard College,

156.

Duxbury, 112.

E

Eaton, Theodore, 125.
Edmundson, Wm., the first preacher
in North Carolina, 260; his jour-
nal, quoted, 60-61; a second visit
to North Carolina, 263.
Edwards, Jonathan, 176.
Elizabeth, Queen, her letter to Sir
Walter Raleigh, quoted, 196.
Endicott, Gor., letter to, 135, 136.
Endicott, John, 110.

English government, colonies treated
by, 590.

Episcopalians, in Connecticut, 161;
in Massachusetts, 162; of Fair-
field, 167.

Escobar, Portuguese nobleman, 482.
Evans, Gov., 423, 442.

Exempting laws, 161; influence of,
162, 164, 168; in Connecticut, 168.

Falmouth, 121.

F

Devotionalists, origin of, 14; society "Four Intolerable Measures," 606-

of, 16.

Dexter, Dr. H. M., 99.

Dickinson, Jonathan, his letter, 455.
Dinwiddie, Gor., of Virginia, and his
defense against the French, 322-
323; his letter, quoted, 325.
Discovery of America, Dr. Wood on,
501-508; how begun, 473; first
seen, 488; first monument, 494;
second monument, 497; and ex-
pulsion of Jews, 510; bibliogra-
phies of, 520; of pre-Columbian
claims, 520-524; of Vespucci and
the Cabots, 530-532; Harrisse,
quoted, 490.

Dissenters, increase of, 154; victory
of, 157, 161; and congress, 164;
certificate for, 174; and Republi-
cans, 182; effort of, under Bill of
rights, 185; in North Carolina.
(See Quakers.)
Dorchester, 114.

Doyle, on Articles of Pilgrims, 104.
Dunbar, Col., 330.

603; Massachusetts against, 607.
Ferdinand, 478; his order, 510.
Fisk, John, cited, 481.
Forbes, Gen'l, an expedition against
Fort Duquesne, 369–370.

Fort Cumberland, 328; garrisoned,
331, 353; the reduction of the
force of, 367.

Fort Duquesne, 323; an expedition
against, 325.

Fox, George, and his preachings in
North Carolina, 262, 270; quoted,
388, 389, 392, 402.
France, humiliation of, 561.
Franklin, Benjamin, and his mis-
sion to England, 364–365; defends
Maryland's cause, 372; goes to
England again, 378; quoted, 595.
Frederick, Lord Baltimore, 316, 340:
and the assembly, 353-359, 373.
Frederick the Great, and the rise of
the house of Hohenzollern, 561.
Free-Will Anti-Pedo Baptists, rise
of, 183.

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297.

Grahame, Mr., cited, 388; cited,
428, 436, 447.
Granada, 485.

Grand Council of 1641 and resolu-
tion, 169.

Granville, Lord John, and the Test
Act, 281, 283.

"Great Laws," 391, 396; law con-
cerning second marriage, 413; bill
concerning prison, 414.
Green, quoted, 256, 557, 558, 561, 563.
Green Harbor, 113.
Green, Roger, 258.

Greenwood, prison writings of, 100.
Grenville, and his policy, 556, 578,
582.

Grindall, 97.

Goethe, quoted, 507.

Gordon, the missionary, quoted, 266;
account of the Cary rebellion, 288.
Gorges' Heirs, 121.

Gott, Charles, and writing, 111.
Government, Federal, and religion,
179.
Guanahani, 489.

H

Half-way covenant, 141, 170; and its
results, 158.

Hallam, quoted, 94.
Hammond, Mr., 216.

Hampden, Mr., cited, 600.

Hanno, the Carthaginian, 473.
Harrison, Rev. Thomas, 215.
Hartford, 125; second church of, 153.
Harvey, Thomas, and the Quakers in
North Carolina, 271, 272.
Hawks, Dr., quoted, 248, 283, 286.
Haynes, 125.
Hebbe, Mrs., 31.
Hebrew prophecy, 475.
Hellström, Mr., 31.

Helsingland, 11; religious state of,
12; main occupation of the people
of, 15.
Henden, Nils, an apostle of Janson-
ism, 31; success of, 56; and the
doctrine of celibacy, 56, 69.
Henry, Patrick, and his Resolution,
591 note; by Congress of '74, 612.
Henry, Prince, the Navigator, 481.
Hercules, pillars of, 473.
Herodotus, quoted, 433.
Higginson, 110, 111.
Hispaniola, Island of, 478.
Holdernesse, Lord, 322.
Hooker, 125.
Horrland, 15.
Hough, quoted, 130.
Hovey, 163.

Hubbard, quoted, 109.
Humboldt, Alex. von, 490.

Hyde, Edward, 251; and the Cary
rebellion, 297-300.

I

Illinois, the Jansonists settle in, 27.
Immigrants, from Sweden, 28, 37.
India, new route to, 481, 482.
Indians, respect Penn, 445.
Isabella, 478.

J

James I, and the importation of con-
victs, 347.
Janson, Eric, childhood of, 16;
change in religious view, 17; in-
terview with Olson, 18; the rise
of Jansonism, 18; relation to the
Methodists, 20; preachings of, 20,
21; arrests of, 22, 23; comes to
America, 27; communistic idea of,
27;
his authority over the colony,
38; trouble with John Root, 39;

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