The Chronicles of America Series, Volume 91919 |
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Page 4
... Indians and trading with them for furs , and turn- · ing to the best account the advantages that a bountiful though exacting nature furnished ready to their hand . To the west of the colonists lay the boundless wilderness ; on the east ...
... Indians and trading with them for furs , and turn- · ing to the best account the advantages that a bountiful though exacting nature furnished ready to their hand . To the west of the colonists lay the boundless wilderness ; on the east ...
Page 10
... Indians , more often on reservations than in the households or on the farms of the white men , survived in ever dwindling remnants of their former tribes . New New York and Pennsylvania , though they were closely akin to New England in ...
... Indians , more often on reservations than in the households or on the farms of the white men , survived in ever dwindling remnants of their former tribes . New New York and Pennsylvania , though they were closely akin to New England in ...
Page 20
... Indians , who ranged over the region from seaboard to upland and carried terror to the hearts of even the boldest pioneers . Not until after the horrible massacre of 1711 , from the effects of which the Al- bemarle settlement never ...
... Indians , who ranged over the region from seaboard to upland and carried terror to the hearts of even the boldest pioneers . Not until after the horrible massacre of 1711 , from the effects of which the Al- bemarle settlement never ...
Page 22
... Indians , and lived in great harmony among themselves . As they increased in numbers and widened their area of occupation , some of them , by coming into touch with the Scotch - Irish who had pushed in from the north , eventually linked ...
... Indians , and lived in great harmony among themselves . As they increased in numbers and widened their area of occupation , some of them , by coming into touch with the Scotch - Irish who had pushed in from the north , eventually linked ...
Page 92
... Indian doctors , and popular concoctions were taken in large doses by credulous people . Madam Smith wrote that the juice of the Jerusalem oak had cured all the negro children on the plantation of a distemper and that several negroes ...
... Indian doctors , and popular concoctions were taken in large doses by credulous people . Madam Smith wrote that the juice of the Jerusalem oak had cured all the negro children on the plantation of a distemper and that several negroes ...
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acres adorned advertised America Anglican Annapolis apprentice back country Beverley Birket Boston breeches brick building built Cape Fear captain chaises Charleston chiefly church cloth coast colonial colonists color Connecticut diary drink Dutch early Edenton eighteenth century England English Essex Institute fall line farmers farms ferry French frequently Georgia Germans Governor horses houses Huguenots imported indentured servants Indian indigo Jersey John Jonathan Boucher journey King's Chapel labor land large numbers less libraries lived London manors Maryland Mass Massachusetts master meetinghouse merchants negroes Newport North occasionally Pennsylvania period Philadelphia plantations planters Portsmouth Quakers Quincy race Rhode Island rivers road Salem Savannah schools Scotch-Irish sermons settlements settlers ship silk slaves social sold sometimes South Carolina Southern stone Thomas Thomas Bulfinch tion towns trade traveler usually Virginia voyage West Indies William Byrd Williamsburg Wilmington women wood wore wrote York