CHAP. II.
An account of the
country on Delaware, and the North River, while the
first was in
possession of the Dutch and Swedes.
From what has
been said, it is evident that the colonies New-York,
New-Jersey,
Pennsylvania, and Maryland, were included in the great patent,
last mentioned;
but that becoming void, the crown was at liberty to
regrant the same
to others; but it does not appear that any part of those
provinces was
settled by virtue thereof; nor indeed was any distinct
discovery of them
made, until many years afterwards. New-Jersey,
Pennsylvania, and
other lands adjacent, notwithstanding the antient right
of the crown of
England, deduced as aforesaid, had two pretenders to them;
the Dutch and the
Swedes: The claim the former set up, was under colour of
a discovery made
in the year 1609, by Henry Hudson, an Englishman,
commander of a
ship called the Half-Moon, fitted out from Holland by the
East-India
company, to discover by a north-west passage, a nearer way to
China: In this
voyage he sailed up to the place now New-York, and up the
river, from him
called Hudson's river; and returning sometime after to
Amsterdam, the
Dutch pretended to have purchased the chart he made of the
American coast;
and having obtained a patent from the states, in the year
1614, to trade to
New-England, they settled in New-York, which they called
New-Netherland;
and kept possession until Sir Samuel Argole, governor of
Virginia,
disputed their title; alledging that the country having been
discovered by an
Englishman, in right of his master, he could not suffer
it to be
alienated from the crown, without the king's consent: He
therefore
compelled the Dutch colony to submit to him, and to hold it
under the
English: But sometime after a new governor coming from
Amsterdam, they
not only neglected to pay their usual acknowledgement to
the governor of
Virginia, but in the year 1623, fortified their colony, by
building several
forts: One on the Delaware, (by them called South River)
near Gloucester,
in New-Jersey, which they named Nassau; a second on
Hudson's, (the
North River) in the province of New-York, which they named
Fort Orange; and
a third on Connecticut river, (by them called the Fresh-
River) which they
named the Hirsse of Good Hope. Hudson's River lying near
the sea, and the
navigation esteemed less difficult than the other, their
settlements were
chiefly on both sides of that river; at the entrance of
which, the town
by them also called New Amsterdam, was built; so that by
the time the
Swedes came into America, which was a few years after, they
had wholly
quitted the land adjacent to the river Delaware.
The proceedings
of the Dutch in building the forts, and in a manner taking
possession of the
country, having been represented to king Charles the
first, his ambassadors
at the Hague made such pressing instances to the
states, that they
disowned having given any commission for what the Dutch
had done, and
laid the blame on their East-India company. Upon this king
Charles gave a
commission to Sir George Calvert, lately made lord
Baltimore;1 to
possess and plant that part of America, now called
Maryland; and to
Sir Edmond Loeyden, or Ployden, to plant the northern
parts, towards
New-England. The Dutch afraid of the power of the English,
were willing to
compound matters a second time; offering to leave their
plantations, in
consideration of £.2500 to be paid them for the charges
they had been at:
But soon after, king Charles being involved in his
troubles, was
hindered from supporting his colonies; they therefore not
only fell from
their first proposals, but as was reported, furnished the
natives with
arms, and taught them the use of them, that by their
assistance they
might dispossess the English all around them.
Matters thus
circumstanced, we shall leave them, in order to trace their
neighbours, the
Swedes into America; the first settlement of whom,
according to
their own account, was thus occasioned.2 In the reign of
Gustaphus
Adolphus, and in the year 1626, an eminent merchant named
William Useling,
gave a great character of this country, applauding it for
fruitful fertile
land, abounding with all necessaries of life; and used
many arguments to
persuade the Swedes to settle a colony here: These were
so prevalent,
that Gustavus issued a proclamation at Stockholm, exhorting
his subjects to
contribute to a company associated to the purpose
aforesaid, which
was called the West-India company, confirmed by that
prince: In a
general assembly the year following, sums of money were
raised to carry on
the intended settlement, to which the king, the lords
of the council,
the chief of his barons, knights, coronets, principal
officers in his
militia, bishops, clergy, and diverse of the common people
of Swedeland,
Finnland and Liffland, contributed; and responsible persons
were chosen to
see what was propos'd put in execution, consisting of am
admiral, a
vice-admiral, merchants, factors, commissaries, &c. and it was
concluded to get
as many as they thought fit, of those who would
voluntarily ship
themselves to America, to settle and cultivate a
colony.
In 1627, the
Swedes and Finns accordingly came over hither: Their first
landing was at
Cape Inlopen; the sight created a pleasure, and they named
it Paradise
Point: Some time after they purchased of some Indians (but
whether of such
as had the proper right to convey is not said) the land
from Cape Inlopen
to the Falls of Delaware, on both sides the river, which
they called
New-Swedeland Stream; and made presents to the Indian chiefs,
to obtain
peaceable possession of the land so purchas'd: But the Dutch
continuing their
pretensions, in 1630 one David Pietersz de Vries, their
countryman, built
a fort within the capes of Delaware, on the west, about
two leagues from
Cape Cornelius, at the place now Lewis-Town, then and at
present often
called by the name of Hoarkill.
In 1631, the
Swedes also built a fort on the west of Delaware, to which
they gave the
name the ruins of it yet bears, Christeen.3 Here a small
town was laid out
by Peter Lindstrom, their engineer, and here they first
settled; but this
settlement was afterwards demolished by the Dutch.
On an island
called Tennecum, sixteen miles above this town, the Swedes
erected another
fort, which they named New Gottemburgh; and John Printz,
their governor, built
a fine house, and other suitable accommodations;
planted an
orchard, and called his settlement Printz's Hall: The principal
freemen had also
their plantations on this island.
About this time
the Swedes also built forts at Chester, and other places.
In the same year
Chancellor Oxestiern, ambassador from Sweden, made
application to
king Charles the first, to have the right the English
claimed by their
being the first discoverers yielded up: it was, (as they
say,) the proof
an uncertainty given up accordingly: They also said they
had purchased the
pretence the Dutch claim'd by virtue of the prior
settlement, and
buildings here; most of which were destroy'd before their
arrival.
If this be true,
the Dutch it seems did not think proper long to abide by
their contract;
but gave the Swedes disturbances, by encroaching on their
new settlement;
and both of them join'd to dispossess the English, who
also attempted to
settle the eastern side of Delaware; one Kieft, a
director under
the states of Holland, assisted by the Swedes, drove the
English away, and
hired the Swedes to keep them out: The Dutch complained,
that the Swedish
governor judging this a fair opportunity; built fort
Elsinburgh on the
place from whence the English had been driven, and from
thence used great
freedom with their vessels, and all others bound up the
river, making
them strike to the fort; from which they also sent men on
board to know
whence the vessels came: This the Dutch deem'd exercising an
authority in a
country not their own.4 But the Musketoes were so numerous,
the Swedes were
unable to live here, and therefore removing, named the
place
Musketoeburgh.
The Dutch seem to
have had a very great opinion of the land near the
Delaware, and were
under great apprehensions of being dispossessed by the
English, who they
complained had diverse times attempted to settle about
that river and
judged if they once got footing, they would soon secure
every part, so
that neither Hollander nor Swede would have any thing to
say here; in
particular they mention Sir Edmond Ploeyden, as claiming
property in the
country, under a grant from king James the first, who they
alledge declined
any dispute with them, but threatened to give the Swedes
a visit, in order
to dispossess them.5
John Printz
continued governor of the Swedes from his arrival until about
the year 1654,
when he returned to Sweden, having first deputed his son-in-
law, John
Papegoia, governor in his stead, who also sometime after
returned to his native
country, and left the government to John Rysing: He
renewed the
league of friendship with the English and Dutch in the
neighbourhood,
and formally with the Indians; for this purpose a meeting
was held with the
Sachems or Indian chiefs, at Printz's Hall, on Tenecum
island where a
speech was made to them in behalf of the queen of Sweden,
expressing the
desires the Swedes had to renew their friendship: The
Indians had
before made complaint, that the Swedes had introduced much
evil amongst
them; because many of the Indians since their coming were
dead; but the
Swedes now making them considerable presents, these received
and divided
amongst them, one of their chiefs, whose name was Noaman, made
a speech rebuking
the rest for having spoken evil of the Swedes, and done
them harm;
telling them they should do so no more, that the Swedes were a
good people, and
thanking them for the presents, promised for the future,
that a more
strict friendship should be observed betwixt them: That as
formerly they had
been but one body and one heart, they should be
henceforward, as
one head, as a token of which he waived both his hands as
if tying a strong
knot, promising also that if they heard of any mischief
plotting against the
Swedes, although it were midnight, they would give
them notice, and
desired the like notice from the Swedes, if they
understood harm
was intended them; the Swedes then desiring the Indians in
general would
give them some signal that they all assented to what was
said; they gave a
general shout of approbation, and in the conclusion were
entertained by
the Swedes with victuals and drink; it was observed the
Indians kept this
league faithfully: The Swedish ships sent to succour
this new colony,
being obstructed in their intended voyage, by the
Spaniards; and
the Swedes unable for want of money to keep their forts in
repair; gave
their more powerful neighbours the Dutch, opportunity with
less danger to
make encroachments upon them. Accordingly, in this year,
the Dutch who
inhabited near Virginia and New-Sweden, gave the Swedes
disturbance,
seeking to regain the forts they had formerly possessed: But
this by means of
the Swede governor, with Peter Stuyvesant, who commanded
under the Dutch,
at New-Amsterdam, was in appearance settled; yet in the
year following,
the Dutch fitted out seven vessels from New-Amsterdam,
with six or seven
hundred men; who in the summer, under the command of
Stuyvesant, came
up Delaware, and took their first quarters at
Elsingburgh, where
they made some Swedes prisoners: Next they sailed
towards a fort
called Holy Trinity; having landed their men at a point
near the place,
and intrenched themselves, they soon after went up to the
fort, and
demanded a surrender, threatning what they would do in case of
refusal: After
which, by treaty or otherwise, they gained possession, took
down the Swedes
flag, and hoisted their own, securing all places with
their soldiers,
and sending the Swedes they had taken prisoners, on board
their vessels: -
An acquisition deemed considerable, because this fort was
looked upon as
the key of New-Sweden.
On the second of
September, they besieged Christiana fort and town; and
destroyed New
Gottemburgh, with such houses as were without the fort;
plundering the inhabitants
of what they had, and killing their cattle; the
Swedes
endeavoured to perswade the Dutch to desist from these acts of
hostility, but to
no purpose: After 14 days siege, they (in want of
ammunition) were
obliged to surrender upon terms: That all the great guns
should be
restored; to which purpose an inventory was taken; the Swedes
had also the
gratification to march out of the fort, with their arms,
their colours
flying, and drums beating. The officers and other principal
inhabitants among
the Swedes, were carried prisoners to New-Amsterdam, and
thence to
Holland; but the common people submitting to the Dutch, remained
in the country.
From this time
'till the year 1664, New-Sweden, and New-Netherland,
continued in
possession, and under government of the Dutch; who, on the
island called
Manhattan, at the mouth of Hudson's river, had built the
city, which they
named New-Amsterdam (New York); and the river they
sometimes called
the Great River: About 150 miles up, they built a fort,
and called it Orange,
(Albany) from thence they drove a profitable trade
with the Indians,
who came overland as far as from Quebec, to deal with
them. The first
bounds of New-York, were Maryland on the south, the main
land as far as
could be discovered westward, the river of Canada
northward, and
New-England eastward: But the limits of this province, by
the grants
afterwards, were reduced into a much narrower compass; that now
called
New-Jersey, in virtue of one of those grants, was probably so
denominated, in
compliment to Sir George Carteret, one of the proprietors,
and a Jersey
man.6
1 "About the
year 1620, while George Calvert, afterwards lord Baltimore,
was secretary of
state to James 1st; he obtained a patent for him and his
heirs, to be absolute
lord and proprietor (with the royalties of a count
Palatine) of the
province of Avalon, in Newfoundland, which was so named
by him, from
Avalon, in Somersetshire; wherein Glastonbury stands the
first fruits of
christianity in Britain; as the other was in that part of
America, there he
built a fine house, in Ferryland, and spent £.25,000 in
advancing this
new plantation: after the death of king James, he went
twice in person
to Newfoundland - finding his plantation very much exposed
to the insults of
the French, he was at last forced to abandon it:
whereupon he went
over to Virginia, and after having viewed those parts,
came to England,
and obtained from king Charles (who had as great a regard
and affection for
him as king James) a patent to him and his heirs, for
Maryland - that
king naming it in honour of his beloved queen Henrietta
Maria. Biogr.
Britania, Art. "Geo. Calvert."
2 Hist. of
Swedeland in America, by Thomas Companius Holm, printed at
Stockholm anno
1702.
3 Near
Wilmington, it gives name to a noted creek there.
4 The account
here is from a manuscript copy, said to be printed in
Holland, anno
1662, the original in the late Sir Hans Sloane's collection,
entitled, A brief
account of New Netherland. - In 1683 the Dutch had a
meeting-place for
religious worship at New-Castle; and the Swedes three,
one at Christeen,
one at Tenecum, and one at Wicoco.
5 In 1648, a
pamphlet was published, entitled, "A description of the
province of New
Albion, and a direction for adventurers with small stock
to get two for
one, and good land freely; and for gentlemen and all
servants,
labourers and artificers, to live plentifully; and a former
description
reprinted, of the healthiest, pleasantest and richest
plantation of New
Albion in North Virginia, proved by thirteen witnesses;
together with a
letter from master Robert Evelin, that lived there many
years, shewing
the particularities and excellence thereof; with a brief of
the charge of
victualling and necessaries, to transport and buy stock for
each planter or
labourer there, to get his master £.50 per annum, or more,
in twelve trades,
and at £.10, charges only a man." From a few extracts of
this pamphlet,
the reader will see an account of the country in some
respects more descriptive
than is commonly to be found of that date; he
will however,
allow for a little more being said than was necessary in
some places.
"Now for the
full and ample satisfaction of the reader, of his majesty's
just title, and
power to grant, enjoy, and possess these countries, as
well against
aliens as Indians, which this forty years hath not been by
print declared,
you may read at large master Hacluit's voyages and
discoveries,
master Purchas and captain Smiths: for when the Spaniard and
Portugall discover'd
and possest 140 years since the East Indies, Brasill,
the south part of
America, the Charibees and Antell isles, and seated
Saint John de
Porto Rico, Hispaniola, Jamaica and Cuba, and the fort and
port of Havannah,
against the gulf and current, Batuana isles, and point
of Florida; then
that most powerfull and richest king of Europe, king
Henry the seventh
of England, sent out an Englishman born at Bristol,
called Cabot,
granted under his greate seale to him all places and
countrys by him
to be discover'd and possest, who then beginning at Cape
Florida
discoverd, entered on, took possession, set up crosses, and
procured
atturnment and acknowledgement of the Indian kings to his then
majesty, as head,
lord and emperour of the south-west America, all along
that coast both
in Florida from 20 degrees to 35, where old Virginia in 35
and 30 minutes,
65 years since was seated by 5 several colonies about
Croatan cape,
Haloraske, and Rawley's isle, by Sir Walter Rawley, who had
from queen Elizabeth
that place, and two hundred leagues from it in all
places adjoyning;
Sir Richard Greenfield, Sir Ralph Lane, and master White
his partners
seating and fortifying there; the said Cabot farther taking
possession in 37,
of that part called Virginia and Chisapeack Bay being
now his majesty's
demesne colony of Virginia, and of the next great bay in
or near 39,
called now by the Dutch Cape Henlopen, the south river, and by
us Cape James and
Delaware Bay, of the baron of Delawares name, being then
governor of
Virginia, who by Sir Thomas Dale, and Sir Samuel Argoll, 40
years since took
possession and atturnment of the Indian kings, and 60
years since Sir
Walter Rawley seated and left 30 men, and four pieces of
ordinance, and
the creek near Cape James, by the Dutch called Horekill, by
us Roymount, and
by the Indians Cui Achomoca; and so the next river by us
called Hudson's
river, of the name of Hudson an Englishman, the discoverer
thirty five year
since, who sold his discovery, plots and cards to the
Dutch; and so
Cabot discovered severall rivers and countries all along the
coast North East,
now called New-England, and divided in nine severall
governments, and
further discovered Port-Royall, and that part called New-
Scotland, and set
up crosses, where you may see in the French book called
New-France, the
French found an old crosse all moss, in an eminent place
at the head of
that bay and port, and discovered all that coast and
Newfoundland, and
that called Terra de Laborador, or New-Britain, as far
as the frozen
strait of Davis; shortly after one master Hore in the reign
of king Henry the
8th, reneued this actuall possession, atturnment of the
Indian kings,
brought home divers of the chief Indian kings to England,
who gave their
homage and oath of fidelity for these countries to king
Henry the eight
in person, setting on his throne in state in his palace
hall at
Westminster. Then Virginia being granted, settled, and all that
part now called
Maryland, New-Albion and New-Scotland, being part of
Virginia, Sir Thomas
Dale and Sir Samuel Argoll, captains and counsellors
of Virginia,
hearing of divers aliens and intruders, and traders without
license, with a
vessell and forty soldiers, landed at a place called Mount
Desert, in
Nova-Scotia, near St. John's River, or Twede, possest by the
French, there
killed some French, took away their guns, and dismantled the
fort, and in
their return landed at Manhatas-Isle in Hudson's river, where
they found four
houses built, and a pretended Dutch governor, under the
West-India
company of Amsterdam share or part; who kept trading boats, and
trucking with the
Indians; but the said knights told him, their commission
was to expell him
and all aliens, intruders on his majesty's dominions and
territories; this
being part of Virginia, and this river an English
discovery of
Hudson an Englishman, the Dutchman contented them for their
charge and
voiage, and by his letter sent to Virginia and recorded,
submitted
himself, company and plantation to his majesty, and to the
governor and
government of Virginia; but the next pretended Dutch governor
in maps of
printed cards calling this part New-Netherland, failing in
paying of
customes at his return to Plymouth in England, was there with
his bever, goods
and person attached to his damage of £.1500, whereupon at
the suit of the
governor and councill of Virginia, his now majesty by his
embassadour in
Holland, complaining of the said aliens intrusion, on such
his territories
and dominions, the said lords, the states of Holland by
their publique
instrument declared, that they did not avow, nor would
protect them,
being a private party of the Amsterdam West-India company,
but left them to
his majesty's will and mercy: whereupon three severall
orders from the
councill table, and commissions have been granted for the
expelling and
removing them thence, of which they taking notice, and
knowing their
weakness and want of victuals have offered to sell the same
for £.2500, and
lastly taking advantage of our present, war and
distractions, now
ask £.7000, and have lately offered many affronts and
damages to his
majesties subjects in New-England: and in generall endanger
all his majesty's
adjoyning countries, most wickedly, feloniously, and
traiterously,
contrary to the marine and admiral laws of all christians,
sell by wholesale
guns powder shot and ammunition to the Indians,
instructing them
in the use of our fights and arms; insomuch as 2000
indians by them
armed, Mohawks, Raritons, and some of Long-Isle with
their own guns so
sold them, fall into war with the Dutch, destroyed all
their scattering
farms and boors, inforcing them all to retire to their up
fort, 40 leagues
up that river and to Manhatas, for all or most retreating
to Manhatas, it
is now a pretty town of trade, having more English than
Dutch: and it is
very considerable that three years since Stuy their
governor put out
his declaration, confessing that the neighbour English
might well be
offended with their selling Indians arms and ammunition, but
being but a few
and so scattered, they could not live else there, or
trade, the
Indians refusing to trade or suffer the Dutch to plow without
they would sell
them guns. The like folly they committed and inconvenience
to themselves,
and all English, for eight years since, in their West-India
fleet, battered
by the Spanish Armado, they brought home forty Swedish
poor soldiers;
and hearing that capt. Young and master Evelin, had given
over their fort
begun at Eriwomeck within Delaware Bay, there half starved
and totter'd they
left them, who learning the Indian language, and finding
much talk and
trials of a gold mine there, though in truth fifty shillings
charges produced
of that light sand but nine shillings in gold, and
therefore was of
capt. Young that tried it slighted; yet one Bagot under
the Swedes name
and commission, there traded to crosse the Dutch of
Manahatas, and to
undersell them, and left and seated there, eighteen
Swedes who
proclaiming a gold mine drew more to them, and have gotten a
great trade; and now
this last summer fifteen Swedes and fifteen Dutch had
a skirmish; the
Swedes pulled down a Dutch trading house, and doe both
undersell them
and spoiled much their and English trading with the
Indians, both
striving to please and side with the Indians, both
entertaining and
refusing to return all English fugitives and servants.
The Swedes hiring
out three of their soldiers to the Sasquehannocks, have
taught them the
use of our arms and fights, and marching with them into the
king's own colony
of Virginia, have carried thence the king of Pawtomeck
prisoner, and
expell'd his and eight other Indian nations in Maryland,
civiliz'd and
subject to the English crown. Now if a proclamation of open
war be set out
against the Dutch and Swedes for this their villainy, and
all English
forbid to trade, victuall or relieve them, they must both
vanish,
especially if those bad English that live, adhere and obey these
aliens in these
his majesty's countries, be warned of the statute of king
James of famous
memory, in these words: That all subjects giving any
obedience or
acknowledgment to any forain prince, state, pope, or
potentate, within
his majesties territories and dominions in England or
beyond the sea,
is a traitor, and ought to suffer as a traitour. And
certainly all
English, and chiefly those of New-England being ready in
twenty four hours
will joyn to expel them both to regain their own trade,
to get their
seats, and to be rid of the danger of armed gunning Indians.
"Whereas
that part of America, or North Virginia, lying about 39 degrees
on Delaware Bay
called the province of New Albion, is scituate in the best
and same temper,
as Italy, between too cold Germany, and too hot Barbary:
so this lying
just midway betweene New England 200 miles north, and
Virginia 150 miles
south, where now are settled 8000 English, and 140
ships in trade,
is freed from the extream cold and barrennesse of the one,
and heat and
aguish marshes of the other, and is like Lumbardy, and a rich
fat soil, plain, and
having 34 rivers on the main land, 17 great Isles, and
partaketh of the
healthiest aire and most excellent commodities of Europe,
and replenished
with the goodliest woods of oaks and all timber for ships
and masts,
mulberries, sweet cypresse, cedars, pines and firres, 4 sorts
of grapes for
wine, and raisins, and with the greatest variety of choice
fruits, fish and
fowl, stored with all sorts of corn, yeelding 5, 7 and l0
quarters an acre:
silkgras, salt, good mines & diers ware, 5 sorts of
deer, buffes, and
huge elks to plow and work, all bringing 3 young at
once. The uplands
covered many moneths with berries, roots, chestnuts,
walnuts, beech
and oak mast to feed them, hogges and turkeys, 500 in a
flock, and having
near the colony of Manteses 400000 acres of plain mead
land, and meer
levell, to be flowed and fludded by that river for corn,
rice, rapes, flax
and hemp. After 17 years trading and discovery there and
triall made, is
begun to be planted and stored by the governor and company
of New Albion,
consisting of forty four lords, baronets, knights and
merchants, who
for the true informing of themselves, their friends,
adventurers and
partners by residents and traders there four severall
years out of
their journall books, namely, captaine Browne, a
ship-master, and
master Stafford his mate, and by captaine Claybourn 14
years there
trading, and Constantine his indian, there born and bred, and
by master Robert
Evylin, 4 years there, yet by eight of their hands
subscribed and
enrolled doe testifie this to be the true state of the
country, of the
land and Delaware Bay or Charles River, which is further
witnessed by
captain Smith and other Books of Virginia and by New Englands
prospect, new
Canaan, captain Powels map, and other descriptions of
New England and Virginia."
Master Evelin's
Letter.
"Good Madam:
"Sir Edmund
our noble governour and lord earl Palatine, persisting still
in his noble
purpose to go on with his plantation in Delaware or Charles
river, just midway
between New England and Virginia, where with my unckle
Young I severall
years resided, hath often informed himselfe both of me and
master Stratton,
as I perceive by the hands subscribed of Edward Monmouth,
Tenis Palee, and
as master Buckham, master White, and other shipmasters,
and saylors,
whose hands I know, and it to be true, that there lived and
traded with me,
and is sufficiently instructed of the state of the
country, and
people there, and I should very gladly according to his
desire, have waited
on you into Hamshire to have informed your honour in
person, had I not
next weeke been passing to Virginia. But neverthelesse
to satisfie you
of the truth, I thought good to write unto you my
knowledge, and
first to describe you from the north side of Delaware unto
Hudsons river in
Sir Edmunds patent, called New Albion, which lieth just
between New
England and Maryland, and that ocean sea, I take it to be about
160 miles, I
finde some broken land, isles and inlets, and many small
isles at Egbay:
But going to Delaware Bay, by Cape May, which is 24 miles
at most, and is
as I understand very well set out, and printed in captain
Powles map of
New-England, done as is told mee by a draught I gave to M.
Daniel, the
plot-maker, which Sir Edmund saith you have at home, on that
north side about
five miles within a Port, or rode for any ships called
the Nook, and
within lieth the king of Kechemeches, having as I suppose
about 50 men, and
12 leagues higher a little above the Bay and Bar is the
river of
Manteses, which hath 20 miles on Charles river, and 30 miles
running up a fair
navigable deep river all a flat levell of rich and fat
black marsh
mould, which I think to be 300000 acres: In this Sir Edmund
intendeth as he
saith to settle, and there the king of Manteses hath about
100 bow-men; next
above about 6 leagues higher is a fair deep river, 12
miles navigable,
where is freestone, and there over against is the king of
Sikonesses, and
next is Asomoches river and king with an hundred men, and
next is Eriwoneck
a king of forty men where we sate down, and five miles
above is the king
of Ramcock with a hundred men, and four miles higher the
King of Axion
with two hundred men, and next to him tenne leagues over
land an inland
king of Calcefar, with an hundred and fifty men, and then
there is in the
middle of Charles river two fair woody isles, very
pleasant and fit
for parks, the one of a thousand acres, the other of
fourteen hundred,
or thereabout. And six leagues higher near a creek called
Mosilian, the
king having two hundred men. And then we come to the Fals,
made by a rock of
lime-stone, as I suppose it is, about sixty and five
leagues from the
sea, near to which is an isle fit for a city, all
materials there
to build; and above the river fair and navigable, as the
Indians inform
me, for I went but ten miles higher. I doe account all the
Indians to be
eight hundred, and are in several factions and war against
the
Sasquehannocks, and are all extream fearfull of a gun, naked and
unarmed against
our shot, swords, and pikes. I had some bickering with
some of them, and
they are of so little esteem, as I durst with fifteen
men sit down, or
trade in despight of them, and since my return eighteene
Sweeds are
settled there, and so sometime sixe Dutch doe in a boat trade
without fear of
them. I saw there an infinite quantity of bustards, swans,
geese, and fowl,
covering the shoares as within the like multitude of
pigeons, and
store of turkies, of which I tried one to weigh forty and
sixe pounds.
There is much variety and plenty of delicate fresh and sea-
fish, and
shell-fish, and whales, or grampus: elks, deere that bring three
young at a time
& the woods bestrewed many moneths with chestnuts,
wall-nuts, and
mast of severall sorts to feed them, and hogs, that would
increase exceedingly.
There the barren grounds have four kindes of grapes
and many
mulberries with ash, elms, and the tallest and greatest pines and
pitch trees, that
I have seen. There are cedars, cypresse and sassafras,
with wilde fruits,
pears, wilde cherries, pine-apples, and the dainty
parsemenas. And
there is no question but almonds, and other fruits of
Spain will
prosper, as in Virginia. And (which is a good comfort) in four
and twenty houres
you may send or goe by sea to New England or Virginia,
with a fair
winde, you may have cattle, and from the Indians two thousand
barrels of corn,
at twelve pence a bushel in truck, so as victuals are
there cheaper and
better, than to be transported: Neither do I conceive
any great need of
a fort or charge, where there is no enemy.
If my lord
Palatine, will bring with him three hundred men or more, there
is no doubt but
that he may doe very well and grow rich, for it is a most
pure healthfull
air, and such pure wholesome springs, rivers and waters,
as are
delightfull, of a desert, as can be seen, with so many varieties of
severall flowers,
trees and forrests for swine. So many fair risings and
prospects, all
green and verdant: and Maryland a good friend and
neighbour, in
four and twenty houres ready to comfort and supply. And
truly I beleeve,
my lord of Baltimore will be glad of my lord Palatines
plantation and
assistance against any enemy or bad neighbour. And if my
lord Palatine
employ some men to sow flaxe, hemp and rapes in those rich
marishes, or
build ships and make pipe staves, and load some ships with
these wares, or
fish from the northward, he may have any money, ware, or
company brought
him by his own ships, or the ships of Virginia or New
England all the
year. And because your honour is of the noble house of the
Pawlets, and as I
am informed, desire to lead many of your friends and
kindred thither,
whom as I honour, I desire to serve, I shall intreat you
to beleeve mee as
a gentleman and christian, I write you nothing but the
truth, and hope
there to take opportunity in due season to visit you, and
doe all the good
offices in Virginia, my place or friends can serve you
in. And thus
tendering my service, I rest, Madam
Your honours most
humble faithfull servant.
ROBERT
EVELIN."
"Now since
master Elmes letter and seven years discoveries of the lord
governor in
person, and by honest traders with the Indians we finde beside
the Indian kings
by him known and printed, in this province there is in
all twenty three
Indian kings or chief commanders, and besides the number
of 800 by him
named, there is at least 1200 under the two Raritan kings on
the north side
next to Hudsons river, and those come down to the ocean
about little
Egbay and Sandy Barnegate, and about the South cape two small
kings of forty
men a piece, called Tirans and Tiascons, and a third
reduced to
fourteen men at Roymont, the Sasquehannocks are not now of the
naturals left
above 110, tho' with their forced auxiliaries the Ihon a
Does, and
Wicomeses they can make 250: these together are counted valiant
and terrible to
other cowardly dul Indians, which they beat with the sight
of guns only. - -
- - -" The eight seat is Kildorpy, neer the fals of
Charles river,
neer 200 miles up from the ocean, it hath clear fields to
plant and sow and
neer it is sweet large meads of clover or honysuckle, no
where else in
America to be seen, unlesse transported from Europe, a ship
of 140 tuns may
come up to these fals which is the best seat for health,
and a trading
house to be built on the rocks, and ten leagues higher are
lead mines in
stony hills.
"The ninth
is called mount Ployden, the seat of the Rariton king on the
north side of
this province twenty miles from Sandhay sea, and ninety from
the ocean, next to
Amara hill, the retired paradise of the children of the
Ethiopian
emperour, a wonder, for it is a square rock, two miles compasse,
150 foot high, a
wall-like precipice, a strait entrance, easily made
invincible, where
he keeps two hundred for his guard, and under it is a
flat valley, all
plain to plant and sow.
"The
Sasquehannocks new town is also a rare, healthy and rich place, with
it a crystal
broad river, but some fals below hinder navigation, and the
hooke hill on the
ocean with its clear fields neer Hudsons river on one
side, and a ten
leagues flowing river on the south side is much commended
for health and
fish, were it not so northerly.
"The bounds
is a thousand miles compass, of this most temperate rich
province, for our
south bound is Maryland north bounds, and beginneth at
Aquats or the
southermost or first cape of Delaware Bay, in thirty eight
and forty
minutes, and so runneth by, or through, or incitiding Kent Isle,
through
Chisapeask Bay to Piscataway; including the fals of Pawtomecke
river to the head
or northernmost branch of that river, being three
hundred miles due
west, and thence northward to the head of Hudson's
river fifty
leagues, and so down Hudson's river to the ocean sixty
leagues; and
thence to the ocean and isles acrosse Delaware Bay, to the
South cape fifty
leagues; in all seven hundred and eighty miles. Then all
Hudson's river,
isles, Long Isle, or Pamunke, and all isles within ten
leagues of the
said province being; and note, Long isle alone is twenty
broad, and one
hundred and eighty miles long, so that alone is four
hundred miles
compasse. Now I have examined all former patents, some being
surrender'd, and
some adjudg'd void, as gotten on false suggestions, as
that at the
councell table was at master Gonges suit, of Mantachusets, and
as capt.
Clayborn, heretofore secretary and now treasurer of Virginia, in
dispute with
master Leonard Calvert alledgeth; that of Maryland is
likewise void in
part as gotten on false suggestions; for as capt.
Clayborn, sheweth
the Maryland patent in the first part declareth the
king's intention
to be to grant a land thereafter described, altogether
dishabited and
unplanted, though possest with Indians. Now Kent isle was
with many
housholds of English by c. Clayborn before seated, and because
his majesty by
his privy signet shortly after declared it was not his
intention to
grant any lands before seated and habited: and for that it
lieth by the
Maryland printed card, clean northward within Albion, and not
in Maryland, and
not onely late sea-men, but old depositions in Claybornes
hand, shew it to
be out of Maryland, and for that Albions privy signet is
elder, and before
Maryland patent, Clayborn by force entered, and thrust
out master
Calvert out of Kent; next Maryland patent coming to the ocean,
saith "along
by the ocean upon Delaware Bay; that is the first cape of the
two most plain in
view, and exprest in all late English and Dutch cards;
and note unto
Delaware Bay is not into the Bay, nor farther then that cape
heading the Bay,
being in thirty eight and forty, or at most by seven
observations I
have seen, thirty eight and fifty minutes: So as
undoubtedly, that
is the true intended and ground bound, and line, and no
farther, for the
words following are not words of grant, but words of
declaration; that
is, Which Delaware Bay lieth in forty degrees where New-
England ends;
these are both untrue, and so being declarative is a false
suggestion; is
void, for no part of Delaware Bay lieth in forty. Now if
there were but
the least doubt of this true bounds, I should wish by
consent or
commission, a perambulation and boundary, not but there is land
enough for all,
and I hold Kent isle having lately but twenty men in it,
and the mill and
fort pulled down, and in war with all the indians neer
it, not worth the
keeping."
6 It is said for
some little time at first, to have bore the name New
Canary.