Factions at Jamestown,36,64, n. 4.Fairs and markets on Sundays,138, n. 8.Faith, devotion to,245.Families, the colony a camp of men without,42;a plantation can never flourish without,57;some, sent to Virginia with De la Warr,65, n. 8.Family of Love, Anne Hutchinson accused of accepting the doctrines of the,335.Famine at Jamestown,38,65, n. 5.Fast day, a, appointed in Massachusetts,286.Ferrar, John, election of,71, n. 17;deputy governor,91.Ferrar, Nicholas, Jr., deputy governor of Virginia Company,91;established a religious community at Little Gidding,92;austere discipline of,93;mediæval enthusiasm of,194.Ferrar, Nicholas, Sr., courts of Virginia Company held at house of,91;gave money for educating infidels in Virginia,91.Ferrars, the, among the founders of liberal institutions in America,173.Firearms, sale of, to the savages,191,216, n. 1.Firmin's, Giles, Review of Davis's Vindication,348, n. 5.Fisheries, American, importance of, foreseen, by Capt. John Smith,37;of Newfoundland,261, n. 7.Fishing on Sunday, ordinances against,127.Fishing seasons in the James River learned,49.Fleet, Henry, only survivor of Spelman's party,22, n. 7.Fleet's Journal,23, n. 7.Flemish Protestants favored independency,158, n. 2.Font, the stone, at which Bradford was baptized,151.Food, bad and insufficient,45,46.Force, men not to be converted by,312, n. 19.Formalities, proper, never omitted,41,101;at Plymouth,102.Founding of a state a secondary end,73.Fox, Luke, sails to the northwest,10.Franck's, Sebastian, Chronica,314, n. 24.Frankfort, disputes in the church at, produced great results,105;character of debates at,105;rapid changes produced by the,106,135, n. 3.Freemen's oath extended to residents,289,308, n. 11;opposed by Williams,289,309, n. 12.Fresh River of the Dutch, the Connecticut,324.Frobisher's, Sir Martin, voyages,2,4, n. 1;brilliant failure,5;attempt to plant a colony,7;finds "gold eure,"13;Voyages,21, n. 1.Fuller, Thomas, judgment of Captain John Smith,63, n. 3.Fuller's Church History,103, m.;131, m.;157, n. 1;160, m.;Worthies,259, n. 6.Gainsborough, the hamlet of,150.Gammell's Life of Roger Williams,311, n. 17.Gardens, private, apportioned in Virginia,48,49,68, n. 12.Gates, Sir Thomas, wrecked on the Bermudas,40;abandoned the wreck of Jamestown,41,101;sent to England for cattle,41;denied that human flesh was eaten,65, n. 5;installed governor in proper form,101.General Court of Massachusetts protested against selection of Williams as a minister of the Salem church,271;prevented his ordination,272,307, n. 5;makes regulations for dress,285;appointed a fast day,286;promulgated a new resident's oath,289;"convented" Williams several times,289;forced Salem into submission,291,293;tried and banished Williams,292;fearing his settlement at Narragansett Bay, agreed to send him to England,294;banished scores for their opinions,297;the real extenuation for the conduct of the,297;character of the age forbids condemnation of,300.Geneva, the city of refuge for the Puritans,104;differences between exiles at, and those at Zurich,107.Gibbons, Captain, of Boston, commission sent to,252.Gilbert, Sir Humphrey, on a northwest passage,5;attempt to plant a colony,7.Glass-blowers ran away to the Indians,83.Glass, window, not used in the colony,65, n. 7.Glass-works established near Jamestown,83,95, n. 5.Glastonbury, also called Avalon,258, n. 3.Glover in Phil. Trans.,11, m.Godspeed, The,25.Gold and silver, exportation of, restrained by law,75.Gold, belief in finding, in North America,12,14,22, n. 7;75.Gold-hunting,7,12;in Virginia,13,23,42.Gold mines of the Hudson River,23.Gondomar's spies in the Virginia Company,87;influence over Calvert,226,258, n. 2.Goodman's Court of King James,258, n. 2.Goodwin, Thomas, and others, Apologetical Narrative,185, n. 6.Gorges's Briefe Narration,196, m.Gowns and litanies, squabbles about,107.Gosnold, agitating for a new colony,33;failure of colony in Buzzard's Bay established by,178.Government, democratic, established by the Pilgrims before sailing,185, n. 5;three primary steps for, in America, due to Englishmen who did not cross the sea,205.Government, representative form of, established,55,89;faint promise of, in Maryland charter,234.Governmental functions exercised by commercial corporations,218, n. 8.Grace after meat opposed by Williams,289,290,292,309, n. 12.Greenham's, Richard, MS. on the Sabbath,128.Greenwood, leader of the Separatists, hanged at Tyburn,148.Grenville, Sir Richard, sent to Virginia by Ralegh,21, n. 3.Guiana or North America, Pilgrims choose between,169.Guicciardini on use of spices,22, n. 5.Guilds, dissolution of the,111.Haies in Hakluyt's Voyages,5, m.Hakluyt, Richard, a forerunner of colonization,5;belief of, in a passage to the Pacific,6;stories of gold,12;of mulberry trees,76.Hakluyt's Discourse on Western Planting,6, m.;94, n. 1;97, n. 11;Voyages,2,5, m.; 8, m.;12, m.;23, n. 8.Hamor, Raphe, secretary under Dale, a signer of the Tragicall Relation,66, n. 9;True Discourse,66, n. 9;68, n. 12;70, n. 16;95, n. 3.Hampton Court conference,159;authorities on the,182, n. 1.Hanbury's Memorials,157, n. 1, n. 2;158, n. 3.Hancock, Thomas, the Luther of England,125.Hanging clemency,46;preferred to transportation to Virginia,54;and to the old tyranny,56.Hardwicke Papers,238, m.Hariot's Briefe and True Report,80, m.Harleian Miscellany,240, m.Harrington's Nugæ Antiquæ,116, m.;161, m.;162, m.;182, n. 1.Harrisse's, Henry, John Cabot, the Discoverer of America,21, n. 1.Hartlib's Reformed Virginia Silkworm,79.Harvey, Sir John, sends expedition for gold,13;Governor of Virginia,249;quarreled with Virginians,249;counter-revolution,249.Hawkins, Jane, Mrs. Hutchinson an associate of,340.Hawkins, Sir John, lands luckless seamen in Mexico,14.Haynes, Governor of Massachusetts,332;pronounced sentence against Williams,347, n. 1;letter to Williams while Governor of Connecticut quoted,347, n. 1.Health to the Gentlemanly Profession of Servingmen,134, n. 1.Hearne's Langtoft's Chronicle,93, m.Hening's Statutes,78, m.;79, m.;97, n. 9.Henrietta Maria, Maryland named for,245;godmother to Maryland, jealous of Calvert,249.Henry, Prince, interested in Virginia colony,43.Henry, William Wirt, Address,63, n. 3.Hessey's Bampton Lectures,139, n. 10.Hind's Making of the England of Elizabeth,135, n. 3.Hinman's Antiquities,347, n. 2.Hogs, brood, of the colony eaten,38;wild, in the Bermudas,41,65, n. 6.Holinshed's Chronicles,22, n. 5.Holland, the "mingle mangle of religions" in,164.Holmes's History of Cambridge,318, m.;320, m.Home, Virginia for the first time a,58.Home-makers sent to Virginia,57,58.Homesteads at Newtown sold to newcomers,325,347, n. 3.Hooft, Nederlandsche Historie,312, n. 18.Hooker, Thomas, one of the greatest luminaries of the Puritans,269;desire of his party to move to Connecticut,285,315;set to dispute with Williams,292;early life of,316;driven from his pulpit by Laud,317;fled to Holland,317;a company of his people settled at Newtown,317;arrival at Newtown,319;rivalry with Cotton,320;somber theology of,320;difference between his teachings and those of Cotton,321,346, n. 1;theories of civil government more liberal than Cotton's,322;limited the power of the magistrate,322,347, n. 2;the real founder of Connecticut,325.Hornbeck on John Robinson,158, n. 3.Horses eaten,38.Houses burned for firewood,40.Hubbard's History of Massachusetts,308, n. 8;History of New England,207, m.;215, m.;347, n. 3;testimony of, unreliable,311, n. 17.Hudson, Henry, influenced by Captain John Smith, seeks the South Sea,9.Hudson River gold,23, n. 7.Huguenots of La Rochelle, England allied with,239.Humming birds exported,18.Hundreds or plantations,54,55.Hunt, Robert, first minister in Virginia,90.Hunter, Rev. Joseph, on Shakespeare's Tempest,65, n. 6.Hunter's Founders of New Plymouth,150, m.;152, m.;155, m.;170, m.Hutchinson, Mrs. Anne, an ardent disciple of Cotton in old Boston,329;character of,329,330;"masterpiece of womens wit,"330;meetings for women opened by,330;doctrines of,331;the very apostle of Cotton's doctrine,333;brought to trial by her opponents,337;adroit defense,338;condemned by the General Court,338;sentenced to banishment,339;recanted, but was excommunicated,339,348, n. 8;her sons disfranchised,339;settled in Rhode Island with her party,340;accused of witchcraft by Winthrop,340;wild reports about,340,341;massacred by Indians at New Netherland,341.Hutchinson on the Virginia Colony,186, n. 8.Hutchinson Papers,215, m.;299, m.;307, m.;329, n. 1.Hutchinson party partisans of Vane,332;arrogance of the,333;Pastor Wilson condemned by,333.Hutchinson's History of Massachusetts Bay,211, m.;337, m.Hutchinsonian controversy, the,326,327;the debate waxed hot,334.Hypocrites better than profane persons,299.Idolatry, Puritanism a crusade against,118.Illusions of discoverers,3,75.Inclosures, effects of,135, n. 5;for private not the publick good,136, n. 5.Independency, tendency toward,112,136, n. 6;foreshadowed at Frankfort,137, n. 6;dated back to reign of Mary,146;favored by Flemish Protestants,158, n. 2;Robinsonian, the established religion in New England,215.Independents in early years of Elizabeth's reign,158, n. 2.Indian children, rewards to colonists for educating,91.Indian conjurers laid spell on the coast,178.Indian exhumed and eaten at Jamestown,39.Indians plot destruction of the colonists,8;curiosity regarding the,15;desire to convert,16,90;kidnapped and exhibited,17;attack those first landing in Virginia,28;constant fear of attack from,30;supply food to Jamestown,31,Smith trades with,34,36;devilish ingenuity in torturing,38;outrage the dead,38,64, n. 4;slay gold hunters,43;no danger from, while Dale was in charge,47;taken to England by Dale,49,68, n. 10;unnecessary cruelty to,64, n. 4;reverence for their sacred house,64, n. 4;endowed school established for,83,91;schemes for educating obliterated,92;treachery of, emulated by the settlers,92;destruction of, in Maryland and in Massachusetts divinely ordered,247;right of the king to give away lands of, questioned,274,282,283;land secured from, by purchase,283.Industrial disturbance aids the Puritan movement,111.Infallibility of "godly" elders,301.Ingram, Davy, crosses the continent,14;statement,14,23, n. 8.Injunctions by King Edward VI,138, n. 9.Interludes sometimes played in churches,129.Intolerance sanctioned by logic,299.Iron works established at Falling Creek,83;failure of,96, n. 6.Isthmus in latitude 40°, belief in an,10.James I framed code of laws and orders for the Virginia colony,26;Covnter-Blaste to Tobacco,84;obstinacy of,87;his accession raised the hopes of the Puritans,159;paradoxical qualities of,160;dialectic skill at Hampton Court conference,160;refutes the hapless Puritans,161;boasts that he had peppered the Puritans,162,182, n. 1;results of his folly,162;would wink at but not publicly tolerate the Pilgrims,170;refused guarantee of toleration,173;friendship with George Calvert,223;revenue from fines of lay Catholics,238;Apologie for the Oath of Allegiance,238.James, Puritan minister in Maryland,253.James River discovered by the accident of a storm,27;settlement near the falls of the,37.James River experiments, the,25;their story the overture to the history of life in the United States,58.Jamestown, causes of suffering at,13;founded,29;at first a peninsula,29;abandoned,41;population in 1616,49;in 1889,59, n. 1;some drawings of,60, n. 1.Jamestown Company, the. SeeVirginia Company, The.Jamestown emigrants instructed to explore rivers to the northwest,9.Jesuits flock to England,226;set free,239;interested in migration to Maryland,240;the provincial of the Society of Jesus favored toleration,242;religious observances of, at sea,243;conversion of non-Catholics in Maryland by,246;fled to Virginia,257.Jesus, the humane pity of, unknown to the laws and sermons of the time,301,313, n. 22.Johnson, Bradley T., Foundation of Maryland,263, n. 15.Johnson, Edward, the bloodthirsty Massachusetts Puritan,164;his Wonder-working Providence,318, m.;320, m.;330, m.Johnson, Francis, voyage of, to America,167;pastor at Amsterdam,168.Johnston, Isaac, of Winthrop's company, death of,212.Jones, captain of The Mayflower, conduct of,177;identified with Jones of The Discovery,186, n. 7.Jones's, Rev. Hugh, Present State of Virginia,183, n. 3.Josselyn's Rarities,344, m.Judgment, present, not a binding law,185, n. 6.Judgments, divine, fear of,198.Kent Island, Claiborne's claim to,254.Knowles's Life of Williams,274, m.;308, n. 9;the best of the older biographies,311, n. 17.Knox, John, followers of, dispute with the Coxans at Frankfort,105;not more a sabbatarian than Calvin,124.Labor, common-stock system of, at Jamestown,26;abolished by distribution of land,56;failure of, at Plymouth,179;evils of,186, n. 9.Labor, private, more productive than common-stock system,49;prohibited on Sundays,127.Laborers, twelve so-called, in the Virginia colony,27.Land, division of, in Virginia,48,49,56,68, n. 12.Land grants, various, in Virginia, based on the Grand Charter,56,70, n. 15.Lane, Ralph, governor of Ralegh's first colony,7,21, n. 3;seeks gold and the South Sea,8;account in Hakluyt,iii,8, m.;hopes for his Roanoke colony,74;to Sydney and Walsingham,74, m.Latitude of40°, belief of a westward passage in,9,10.Laud, Archbishop, obliterated by Puritanism,133;one great service of, to the world,193;character of,193;fearless in peril,195;dubbed "the father of New England,"196;Letter to Selden,196;Abbott's account of Laud's rise,216, n. 2;fails to crush the Massachusetts Company,211;suppressing Puritanism,239;fall of,240;non-conforming Puritans hunted from lectureships and chaplaincies by,270;drove John Cotton to New England,279;moving to vacate the Massachusetts charter,282;made head of a commission to govern the colonies,284;drove Hooker from his pulpit at Chelmsford,317;preparations to control Massachusetts made by,343;asked to stop emigration to New England,344;tries to compel Scots to use prayer book,344.Laws, divine, moral, and martial, under which Dale oppressed Virginia,45,70, n. 16;132.Leah and Rachel,79, m.;265, n. 25.Lederer, voyage of, from Virginia,11, m.Legislative body established by the Great Charter,55.Leland, John, Itinerary,152, m.Lenox, Duke of, territory assigned to,259, n. 5.Letters of complaint intercepted,47.Letters of Missionaries,264, n. 17, n. 18.Leyden, Scrooby exiles remove to,166;Pilgrims set out from,174.Liberty in religion congruous with civil peace,315.Lingard,238, m.Little Gidding, Ferrar's community at,92;devastated by the Puritans,93.Liturgy, a, purified of human tradition,106;omitted in many parishes,142.London Separatists,147;organize a church,148;miserably persecuted, some flee to Amsterdam,148.Long Island Sound, Dermer storm-driven into,9.Long Island, English settlers on,345.Lord's Prayer, repetition of the, thought dangerously liturgical,117.Lotteries of the Virginia Company,69, n. 14;abolished,53,70, n. 14.Low Countries, toleration in the,163;condemned by Baylie,164.Luther, Martin, on the Sabbath,124.
Factions at Jamestown,36,64, n. 4.Fairs and markets on Sundays,138, n. 8.Faith, devotion to,245.Families, the colony a camp of men without,42;a plantation can never flourish without,57;some, sent to Virginia with De la Warr,65, n. 8.Family of Love, Anne Hutchinson accused of accepting the doctrines of the,335.Famine at Jamestown,38,65, n. 5.Fast day, a, appointed in Massachusetts,286.Ferrar, John, election of,71, n. 17;deputy governor,91.Ferrar, Nicholas, Jr., deputy governor of Virginia Company,91;established a religious community at Little Gidding,92;austere discipline of,93;mediæval enthusiasm of,194.Ferrar, Nicholas, Sr., courts of Virginia Company held at house of,91;gave money for educating infidels in Virginia,91.Ferrars, the, among the founders of liberal institutions in America,173.Firearms, sale of, to the savages,191,216, n. 1.Firmin's, Giles, Review of Davis's Vindication,348, n. 5.Fisheries, American, importance of, foreseen, by Capt. John Smith,37;of Newfoundland,261, n. 7.Fishing on Sunday, ordinances against,127.Fishing seasons in the James River learned,49.Fleet, Henry, only survivor of Spelman's party,22, n. 7.Fleet's Journal,23, n. 7.Flemish Protestants favored independency,158, n. 2.Font, the stone, at which Bradford was baptized,151.Food, bad and insufficient,45,46.Force, men not to be converted by,312, n. 19.Formalities, proper, never omitted,41,101;at Plymouth,102.Founding of a state a secondary end,73.Fox, Luke, sails to the northwest,10.Franck's, Sebastian, Chronica,314, n. 24.Frankfort, disputes in the church at, produced great results,105;character of debates at,105;rapid changes produced by the,106,135, n. 3.Freemen's oath extended to residents,289,308, n. 11;opposed by Williams,289,309, n. 12.Fresh River of the Dutch, the Connecticut,324.Frobisher's, Sir Martin, voyages,2,4, n. 1;brilliant failure,5;attempt to plant a colony,7;finds "gold eure,"13;Voyages,21, n. 1.Fuller, Thomas, judgment of Captain John Smith,63, n. 3.Fuller's Church History,103, m.;131, m.;157, n. 1;160, m.;Worthies,259, n. 6.
Gainsborough, the hamlet of,150.Gammell's Life of Roger Williams,311, n. 17.Gardens, private, apportioned in Virginia,48,49,68, n. 12.Gates, Sir Thomas, wrecked on the Bermudas,40;abandoned the wreck of Jamestown,41,101;sent to England for cattle,41;denied that human flesh was eaten,65, n. 5;installed governor in proper form,101.General Court of Massachusetts protested against selection of Williams as a minister of the Salem church,271;prevented his ordination,272,307, n. 5;makes regulations for dress,285;appointed a fast day,286;promulgated a new resident's oath,289;"convented" Williams several times,289;forced Salem into submission,291,293;tried and banished Williams,292;fearing his settlement at Narragansett Bay, agreed to send him to England,294;banished scores for their opinions,297;the real extenuation for the conduct of the,297;character of the age forbids condemnation of,300.Geneva, the city of refuge for the Puritans,104;differences between exiles at, and those at Zurich,107.Gibbons, Captain, of Boston, commission sent to,252.Gilbert, Sir Humphrey, on a northwest passage,5;attempt to plant a colony,7.Glass-blowers ran away to the Indians,83.Glass, window, not used in the colony,65, n. 7.Glass-works established near Jamestown,83,95, n. 5.Glastonbury, also called Avalon,258, n. 3.Glover in Phil. Trans.,11, m.Godspeed, The,25.Gold and silver, exportation of, restrained by law,75.Gold, belief in finding, in North America,12,14,22, n. 7;75.Gold-hunting,7,12;in Virginia,13,23,42.Gold mines of the Hudson River,23.Gondomar's spies in the Virginia Company,87;influence over Calvert,226,258, n. 2.Goodman's Court of King James,258, n. 2.Goodwin, Thomas, and others, Apologetical Narrative,185, n. 6.Gorges's Briefe Narration,196, m.Gowns and litanies, squabbles about,107.Gosnold, agitating for a new colony,33;failure of colony in Buzzard's Bay established by,178.Government, democratic, established by the Pilgrims before sailing,185, n. 5;three primary steps for, in America, due to Englishmen who did not cross the sea,205.Government, representative form of, established,55,89;faint promise of, in Maryland charter,234.Governmental functions exercised by commercial corporations,218, n. 8.Grace after meat opposed by Williams,289,290,292,309, n. 12.Greenham's, Richard, MS. on the Sabbath,128.Greenwood, leader of the Separatists, hanged at Tyburn,148.Grenville, Sir Richard, sent to Virginia by Ralegh,21, n. 3.Guiana or North America, Pilgrims choose between,169.Guicciardini on use of spices,22, n. 5.Guilds, dissolution of the,111.
Haies in Hakluyt's Voyages,5, m.Hakluyt, Richard, a forerunner of colonization,5;belief of, in a passage to the Pacific,6;stories of gold,12;of mulberry trees,76.Hakluyt's Discourse on Western Planting,6, m.;94, n. 1;97, n. 11;Voyages,2,5, m.; 8, m.;12, m.;23, n. 8.Hamor, Raphe, secretary under Dale, a signer of the Tragicall Relation,66, n. 9;True Discourse,66, n. 9;68, n. 12;70, n. 16;95, n. 3.Hampton Court conference,159;authorities on the,182, n. 1.Hanbury's Memorials,157, n. 1, n. 2;158, n. 3.Hancock, Thomas, the Luther of England,125.Hanging clemency,46;preferred to transportation to Virginia,54;and to the old tyranny,56.Hardwicke Papers,238, m.Hariot's Briefe and True Report,80, m.Harleian Miscellany,240, m.Harrington's Nugæ Antiquæ,116, m.;161, m.;162, m.;182, n. 1.Harrisse's, Henry, John Cabot, the Discoverer of America,21, n. 1.Hartlib's Reformed Virginia Silkworm,79.Harvey, Sir John, sends expedition for gold,13;Governor of Virginia,249;quarreled with Virginians,249;counter-revolution,249.Hawkins, Jane, Mrs. Hutchinson an associate of,340.Hawkins, Sir John, lands luckless seamen in Mexico,14.Haynes, Governor of Massachusetts,332;pronounced sentence against Williams,347, n. 1;letter to Williams while Governor of Connecticut quoted,347, n. 1.Health to the Gentlemanly Profession of Servingmen,134, n. 1.Hearne's Langtoft's Chronicle,93, m.Hening's Statutes,78, m.;79, m.;97, n. 9.Henrietta Maria, Maryland named for,245;godmother to Maryland, jealous of Calvert,249.Henry, Prince, interested in Virginia colony,43.Henry, William Wirt, Address,63, n. 3.Hessey's Bampton Lectures,139, n. 10.Hind's Making of the England of Elizabeth,135, n. 3.Hinman's Antiquities,347, n. 2.Hogs, brood, of the colony eaten,38;wild, in the Bermudas,41,65, n. 6.Holinshed's Chronicles,22, n. 5.Holland, the "mingle mangle of religions" in,164.Holmes's History of Cambridge,318, m.;320, m.Home, Virginia for the first time a,58.Home-makers sent to Virginia,57,58.Homesteads at Newtown sold to newcomers,325,347, n. 3.Hooft, Nederlandsche Historie,312, n. 18.Hooker, Thomas, one of the greatest luminaries of the Puritans,269;desire of his party to move to Connecticut,285,315;set to dispute with Williams,292;early life of,316;driven from his pulpit by Laud,317;fled to Holland,317;a company of his people settled at Newtown,317;arrival at Newtown,319;rivalry with Cotton,320;somber theology of,320;difference between his teachings and those of Cotton,321,346, n. 1;theories of civil government more liberal than Cotton's,322;limited the power of the magistrate,322,347, n. 2;the real founder of Connecticut,325.Hornbeck on John Robinson,158, n. 3.Horses eaten,38.Houses burned for firewood,40.Hubbard's History of Massachusetts,308, n. 8;History of New England,207, m.;215, m.;347, n. 3;testimony of, unreliable,311, n. 17.Hudson, Henry, influenced by Captain John Smith, seeks the South Sea,9.Hudson River gold,23, n. 7.Huguenots of La Rochelle, England allied with,239.Humming birds exported,18.Hundreds or plantations,54,55.Hunt, Robert, first minister in Virginia,90.Hunter, Rev. Joseph, on Shakespeare's Tempest,65, n. 6.Hunter's Founders of New Plymouth,150, m.;152, m.;155, m.;170, m.Hutchinson, Mrs. Anne, an ardent disciple of Cotton in old Boston,329;character of,329,330;"masterpiece of womens wit,"330;meetings for women opened by,330;doctrines of,331;the very apostle of Cotton's doctrine,333;brought to trial by her opponents,337;adroit defense,338;condemned by the General Court,338;sentenced to banishment,339;recanted, but was excommunicated,339,348, n. 8;her sons disfranchised,339;settled in Rhode Island with her party,340;accused of witchcraft by Winthrop,340;wild reports about,340,341;massacred by Indians at New Netherland,341.Hutchinson on the Virginia Colony,186, n. 8.Hutchinson Papers,215, m.;299, m.;307, m.;329, n. 1.Hutchinson party partisans of Vane,332;arrogance of the,333;Pastor Wilson condemned by,333.Hutchinson's History of Massachusetts Bay,211, m.;337, m.Hutchinsonian controversy, the,326,327;the debate waxed hot,334.Hypocrites better than profane persons,299.
Idolatry, Puritanism a crusade against,118.Illusions of discoverers,3,75.Inclosures, effects of,135, n. 5;for private not the publick good,136, n. 5.Independency, tendency toward,112,136, n. 6;foreshadowed at Frankfort,137, n. 6;dated back to reign of Mary,146;favored by Flemish Protestants,158, n. 2;Robinsonian, the established religion in New England,215.Independents in early years of Elizabeth's reign,158, n. 2.Indian children, rewards to colonists for educating,91.Indian conjurers laid spell on the coast,178.Indian exhumed and eaten at Jamestown,39.Indians plot destruction of the colonists,8;curiosity regarding the,15;desire to convert,16,90;kidnapped and exhibited,17;attack those first landing in Virginia,28;constant fear of attack from,30;supply food to Jamestown,31,Smith trades with,34,36;devilish ingenuity in torturing,38;outrage the dead,38,64, n. 4;slay gold hunters,43;no danger from, while Dale was in charge,47;taken to England by Dale,49,68, n. 10;unnecessary cruelty to,64, n. 4;reverence for their sacred house,64, n. 4;endowed school established for,83,91;schemes for educating obliterated,92;treachery of, emulated by the settlers,92;destruction of, in Maryland and in Massachusetts divinely ordered,247;right of the king to give away lands of, questioned,274,282,283;land secured from, by purchase,283.Industrial disturbance aids the Puritan movement,111.Infallibility of "godly" elders,301.Ingram, Davy, crosses the continent,14;statement,14,23, n. 8.Injunctions by King Edward VI,138, n. 9.Interludes sometimes played in churches,129.Intolerance sanctioned by logic,299.Iron works established at Falling Creek,83;failure of,96, n. 6.Isthmus in latitude 40°, belief in an,10.
James I framed code of laws and orders for the Virginia colony,26;Covnter-Blaste to Tobacco,84;obstinacy of,87;his accession raised the hopes of the Puritans,159;paradoxical qualities of,160;dialectic skill at Hampton Court conference,160;refutes the hapless Puritans,161;boasts that he had peppered the Puritans,162,182, n. 1;results of his folly,162;would wink at but not publicly tolerate the Pilgrims,170;refused guarantee of toleration,173;friendship with George Calvert,223;revenue from fines of lay Catholics,238;Apologie for the Oath of Allegiance,238.James, Puritan minister in Maryland,253.James River discovered by the accident of a storm,27;settlement near the falls of the,37.James River experiments, the,25;their story the overture to the history of life in the United States,58.Jamestown, causes of suffering at,13;founded,29;at first a peninsula,29;abandoned,41;population in 1616,49;in 1889,59, n. 1;some drawings of,60, n. 1.Jamestown Company, the. SeeVirginia Company, The.Jamestown emigrants instructed to explore rivers to the northwest,9.Jesuits flock to England,226;set free,239;interested in migration to Maryland,240;the provincial of the Society of Jesus favored toleration,242;religious observances of, at sea,243;conversion of non-Catholics in Maryland by,246;fled to Virginia,257.Jesus, the humane pity of, unknown to the laws and sermons of the time,301,313, n. 22.Johnson, Bradley T., Foundation of Maryland,263, n. 15.Johnson, Edward, the bloodthirsty Massachusetts Puritan,164;his Wonder-working Providence,318, m.;320, m.;330, m.Johnson, Francis, voyage of, to America,167;pastor at Amsterdam,168.Johnston, Isaac, of Winthrop's company, death of,212.Jones, captain of The Mayflower, conduct of,177;identified with Jones of The Discovery,186, n. 7.Jones's, Rev. Hugh, Present State of Virginia,183, n. 3.Josselyn's Rarities,344, m.Judgment, present, not a binding law,185, n. 6.Judgments, divine, fear of,198.
Kent Island, Claiborne's claim to,254.Knowles's Life of Williams,274, m.;308, n. 9;the best of the older biographies,311, n. 17.Knox, John, followers of, dispute with the Coxans at Frankfort,105;not more a sabbatarian than Calvin,124.
Labor, common-stock system of, at Jamestown,26;abolished by distribution of land,56;failure of, at Plymouth,179;evils of,186, n. 9.Labor, private, more productive than common-stock system,49;prohibited on Sundays,127.Laborers, twelve so-called, in the Virginia colony,27.Land, division of, in Virginia,48,49,56,68, n. 12.Land grants, various, in Virginia, based on the Grand Charter,56,70, n. 15.Lane, Ralph, governor of Ralegh's first colony,7,21, n. 3;seeks gold and the South Sea,8;account in Hakluyt,iii,8, m.;hopes for his Roanoke colony,74;to Sydney and Walsingham,74, m.Latitude of40°, belief of a westward passage in,9,10.Laud, Archbishop, obliterated by Puritanism,133;one great service of, to the world,193;character of,193;fearless in peril,195;dubbed "the father of New England,"196;Letter to Selden,196;Abbott's account of Laud's rise,216, n. 2;fails to crush the Massachusetts Company,211;suppressing Puritanism,239;fall of,240;non-conforming Puritans hunted from lectureships and chaplaincies by,270;drove John Cotton to New England,279;moving to vacate the Massachusetts charter,282;made head of a commission to govern the colonies,284;drove Hooker from his pulpit at Chelmsford,317;preparations to control Massachusetts made by,343;asked to stop emigration to New England,344;tries to compel Scots to use prayer book,344.Laws, divine, moral, and martial, under which Dale oppressed Virginia,45,70, n. 16;132.Leah and Rachel,79, m.;265, n. 25.Lederer, voyage of, from Virginia,11, m.Legislative body established by the Great Charter,55.Leland, John, Itinerary,152, m.Lenox, Duke of, territory assigned to,259, n. 5.Letters of complaint intercepted,47.Letters of Missionaries,264, n. 17, n. 18.Leyden, Scrooby exiles remove to,166;Pilgrims set out from,174.Liberty in religion congruous with civil peace,315.Lingard,238, m.Little Gidding, Ferrar's community at,92;devastated by the Puritans,93.Liturgy, a, purified of human tradition,106;omitted in many parishes,142.London Separatists,147;organize a church,148;miserably persecuted, some flee to Amsterdam,148.Long Island Sound, Dermer storm-driven into,9.Long Island, English settlers on,345.Lord's Prayer, repetition of the, thought dangerously liturgical,117.Lotteries of the Virginia Company,69, n. 14;abolished,53,70, n. 14.Low Countries, toleration in the,163;condemned by Baylie,164.Luther, Martin, on the Sabbath,124.