The Chronicles of America Series, Volume 91919 |
À l'intérieur du livre
Page 20
... later at Wilmington , a town which eventually be- came the capital seat of the colony . But even the Cape Fear settlers , though laying out plantations along the river and its branches , never passed farther 20 COLONIAL FOLKWAYS.
... later at Wilmington , a town which eventually be- came the capital seat of the colony . But even the Cape Fear settlers , though laying out plantations along the river and its branches , never passed farther 20 COLONIAL FOLKWAYS.
Page 27
... later a Governor of Massachusetts , had in eastern Connecticut a manor called Mortlake , on which were a few un- enterprising tenants , holding their land for a money rental . There are other instances of lands let out in a similar ...
... later a Governor of Massachusetts , had in eastern Connecticut a manor called Mortlake , on which were a few un- enterprising tenants , holding their land for a money rental . There are other instances of lands let out in a similar ...
Page 37
... the " true and absolute proprietors , " and Philip Lud- well , Governor , to the small holdings of less impor- tant men , who received grants from the proprietors and later from the Crown in amounts not exceeding a TOWN AND COUNTRY 37.
... the " true and absolute proprietors , " and Philip Lud- well , Governor , to the small holdings of less impor- tant men , who received grants from the proprietors and later from the Crown in amounts not exceeding a TOWN AND COUNTRY 37.
Page 38
and later from the Crown in amounts not exceeding a square mile in extent . Though as a rule the hold- ings in Albemarle were smaller than elsewhere in the South and the conditions of life were simpler and less elaborate , the farmers ...
and later from the Crown in amounts not exceeding a square mile in extent . Though as a rule the hold- ings in Albemarle were smaller than elsewhere in the South and the conditions of life were simpler and less elaborate , the farmers ...
Page 41
... , distilleries , and soap- houses , as well as all facilities for raising rice , corn , and later indigo . At first the chief staple on these plantations was rice ; but the introduction of indigo in TOWN AND COUNTRY 41.
... , distilleries , and soap- houses , as well as all facilities for raising rice , corn , and later indigo . At first the chief staple on these plantations was rice ; but the introduction of indigo in TOWN AND COUNTRY 41.
Expressions et termes fréquents
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